So I’ve been burning east west fires lately mostly because that’s the size wood I have right now and also to practice different styles.
I’ve got it down pretty well in that IF I use sleepers underneath the logs I can achieve pretty hot and complete burns but if I don’t it gets very challenging and I’m guessing this all has to do with airflow which seems pretty obvious.
My question is some stoves exist that only load e/w, do they have to use sleepers for every fire? I see people mostly burn n/s in other stoves so is there something these stoves do or in the design of them that can overcome the airflow issue?
I’ve got it down pretty well in that IF I use sleepers underneath the logs I can achieve pretty hot and complete burns but if I don’t it gets very challenging and I’m guessing this all has to do with airflow which seems pretty obvious.
My question is some stoves exist that only load e/w, do they have to use sleepers for every fire? I see people mostly burn n/s in other stoves so is there something these stoves do or in the design of them that can overcome the airflow issue?
![[Hearth.com] E/W stoves [Hearth.com] E/W stoves](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/272/272234-b49d7347a33c50e309935707301cfed1.jpg?hash=Tr-N1QVAzZ)

![[Hearth.com] E/W stoves [Hearth.com] E/W stoves](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/272/272252-c318ead260e14cd2400a22fb891fe381.jpg?hash=TEaklXuoB1)
![[Hearth.com] E/W stoves [Hearth.com] E/W stoves](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/272/272253-ae93be587ab2c31b156f012546f9ae15.jpg?hash=0mNKj0TbLD)