Welcome to Camp Tundra @yzman! Are you a fan of Yamaha dirt bikes by any chance? Or maybe Yazoo mowers?! 
Anyways, sounds like you probably got a great deal on that Tundra...get in touch with SBI for the firebrick and other "recall/updates" available for it. It should do a nice job of heating your 1800 ft for you if you feed it dry wood...which I assume you would have if you use a stove for 6 years already...if not, get choppin! (PS, Tundra likes smaller splits)
 (PS, Tundra likes smaller splits)
	
		
			
		
		
	
				
			
Anyways, sounds like you probably got a great deal on that Tundra...get in touch with SBI for the firebrick and other "recall/updates" available for it. It should do a nice job of heating your 1800 ft for you if you feed it dry wood...which I assume you would have if you use a stove for 6 years already...if not, get choppin!
 (PS, Tundra likes smaller splits)
 (PS, Tundra likes smaller splits) 
	 
	 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 . Let me explain. I'll start by saying this.. The new Tundra 1 updated model is tough... really tough. My flu hit 1200 plus the other night. How? Well I cracked the door, stepped inside and planned on watching the tv for 5-10 minutes then returning to the stove to close the door as I have done a hundred times.. Well I now have a new rule... I don't leave the stove with out setting an alarm on my phone an keeping it by me or I stay until its time to close the door. I passed out from exhaustion with the TV remote in my hand. Never even turned the TV on. Woke up in a panic 1hr and 15 mins after leaving furnace door cracked with a full load in it. Ran out to the garage in a panic to find the chimney roaring and throwing flames and sparks out the top. Naturally I freaked out. shut the door and immediately popped the baro full open as daylight came out of the flu when I opened the damper. Spun the dial burning my fingers so baro would stay full open and temps plummeted immediately from 1150-1200 down to 950, then 800 ish then down to 600's in about 20 secs or less. The chimney fire went out in about 45 secs. Three things.. luckily the baro damper WAS installed even though its rarely needed.. generally only contains draft in single digits to negative digits however in this case I firmly believe it saved my stove and my garage. 2nd luckily the Tundra burns so clean there was hardly any creosote to really catch fire and most the "chimney fire" was real just the turbo cyclone racing up the flu from to hot of a fire. I don't think the flu was really on fire it self. Thank god. I was seconds from calling the fire department if I did not get it under control in a minute or 2. 3rd thing to mention is I full inspected everything after this event and nothing was damaged.. no cracks, warping.. nothing. now lets consider the time... it takes 45 minutes for a full load to get up to 800 deg with the door cracked for me after a full day burn. coals are pretty low so takes 10-15 minutes just to light up sometimes with out adding air(bellows). So.. to shorten up this point.. I don't think the flu over drafted until after about 30-45 minutes at least more likely almost an hour.. so I am thinking the temps above 900 up to 1200 only occurred for maybe 10-15 minutes. Luckily. On top of that the baro likely kept the flu from going up near 1500 or higher temps. Lesson on that point is INSTALL THE BARO! Even if you don't need it it is prob the best backup last chance safety measure you can have in the system and I firmly believe it saved my butt on this one. I do now have a rule in place for my self so this never happens again. And again .. the updated Tundra is damn tough. I do have a little more protection than SBI's upgrades.. I also lined the loading door up the sides with firebrick, stuffed rock wool in the cracks at the top corners of the fire door inside above fire brick behind heat shield, also have rock wool in the corners above deflector where fresh air comes in from main damper, as well firebrick cut and wrapped around the bottom corners of the heat exchanger door inside.. With all this plus SBI's modifications my stove survived flu temps around 1200 deg for at least 15 mins maybe more. And yes I am an idiot. No excuse for this negligence on my part and I can assure you this was scary enough I will never let anything like that happen again. BTW Steely Dan.. I removed the copper tube and stuck the rubber manometer hose directly on the fitting.. it melted and fell off. lol. I cut it back and tried this again under normal operating temps and it still melted and fell off. I am measuring possible too close to the output so I went back to the copper extension tube to engineer down the temp on the rubber hose. I am measuring draft about 12" away from the output on the level run of the single wall stove pipe. Wondering if possibly my draft readings are off cause I am not in the vertical chimney? I would imagine it wouldn't be much different. My drafting may be higher than I think based on where I am measuring it. I do not want to drill a hole in my 600$ chimney. lol.
. Let me explain. I'll start by saying this.. The new Tundra 1 updated model is tough... really tough. My flu hit 1200 plus the other night. How? Well I cracked the door, stepped inside and planned on watching the tv for 5-10 minutes then returning to the stove to close the door as I have done a hundred times.. Well I now have a new rule... I don't leave the stove with out setting an alarm on my phone an keeping it by me or I stay until its time to close the door. I passed out from exhaustion with the TV remote in my hand. Never even turned the TV on. Woke up in a panic 1hr and 15 mins after leaving furnace door cracked with a full load in it. Ran out to the garage in a panic to find the chimney roaring and throwing flames and sparks out the top. Naturally I freaked out. shut the door and immediately popped the baro full open as daylight came out of the flu when I opened the damper. Spun the dial burning my fingers so baro would stay full open and temps plummeted immediately from 1150-1200 down to 950, then 800 ish then down to 600's in about 20 secs or less. The chimney fire went out in about 45 secs. Three things.. luckily the baro damper WAS installed even though its rarely needed.. generally only contains draft in single digits to negative digits however in this case I firmly believe it saved my stove and my garage. 2nd luckily the Tundra burns so clean there was hardly any creosote to really catch fire and most the "chimney fire" was real just the turbo cyclone racing up the flu from to hot of a fire. I don't think the flu was really on fire it self. Thank god. I was seconds from calling the fire department if I did not get it under control in a minute or 2. 3rd thing to mention is I full inspected everything after this event and nothing was damaged.. no cracks, warping.. nothing. now lets consider the time... it takes 45 minutes for a full load to get up to 800 deg with the door cracked for me after a full day burn. coals are pretty low so takes 10-15 minutes just to light up sometimes with out adding air(bellows). So.. to shorten up this point.. I don't think the flu over drafted until after about 30-45 minutes at least more likely almost an hour.. so I am thinking the temps above 900 up to 1200 only occurred for maybe 10-15 minutes. Luckily. On top of that the baro likely kept the flu from going up near 1500 or higher temps. Lesson on that point is INSTALL THE BARO! Even if you don't need it it is prob the best backup last chance safety measure you can have in the system and I firmly believe it saved my butt on this one. I do now have a rule in place for my self so this never happens again. And again .. the updated Tundra is damn tough. I do have a little more protection than SBI's upgrades.. I also lined the loading door up the sides with firebrick, stuffed rock wool in the cracks at the top corners of the fire door inside above fire brick behind heat shield, also have rock wool in the corners above deflector where fresh air comes in from main damper, as well firebrick cut and wrapped around the bottom corners of the heat exchanger door inside.. With all this plus SBI's modifications my stove survived flu temps around 1200 deg for at least 15 mins maybe more. And yes I am an idiot. No excuse for this negligence on my part and I can assure you this was scary enough I will never let anything like that happen again. BTW Steely Dan.. I removed the copper tube and stuck the rubber manometer hose directly on the fitting.. it melted and fell off. lol. I cut it back and tried this again under normal operating temps and it still melted and fell off. I am measuring possible too close to the output so I went back to the copper extension tube to engineer down the temp on the rubber hose. I am measuring draft about 12" away from the output on the level run of the single wall stove pipe. Wondering if possibly my draft readings are off cause I am not in the vertical chimney? I would imagine it wouldn't be much different. My drafting may be higher than I think based on where I am measuring it. I do not want to drill a hole in my 600$ chimney. lol. 
  Good to hear you still have a house and garage to heat, and that there was no real (apparent) damage done.
 Good to hear you still have a house and garage to heat, and that there was no real (apparent) damage done.  
 
		 
 
		 
 
		