Hi Folks,
I recently had a Lopi Declaration installed and I've been using it for the past week or so. I like the stove. It looks great, seems well built and very easy to use. However, from reading posts on this forum, I though I would be able to easily hit 80 degrees in the room where the insert is installed. So far I've only been able to peak the family room temperature to 75 degrees.
So, some details...
The House
The insert is installed on the far wall of my family room which is 15' by 22'. The family room has cathedral ceilings (18' or so high) and I do have a ceiling fan (which I operate when the stove is going). All the away across the room (directly across the insert) is a 6' wide opening to the rest of the house... and where the thermostat is installed. The house is 3200 sq. ft with 10' ceilings on the first floor.... it was recently built and seems well insulated (this is my first winter here).
The Wood
I'm burning a mixture of ash and maple that I purchased. I measured the moisture content of freshly split wood and it's about 20%... with some pieces as high as 25%.
The Stove
No draft issues that I can see (30ft exterior chimney). To get the family room to hit 75 degrees, I first started the stove with 2 small splits and 2 medium splits. Temperature crept up to 67 (starting at 60). After having a good coal bed, I filled about 80% of the firebox (the Declaration has a 2.9 cubic ft fire box). I don't have a stove thermometer but the secondary air tubes were glowing red and I had a good secondary burn going. I also had the insert fan on max to pump out the heat.
So is it unreasonable to expect my family room to hit 80 degrees after the second load? Would I need another load of wood to get there... or is there something "wrong?" Or maybe I'm doing too good of a job getting the heat out of the family room and into the rest of the house
Or maybe some nice seasoned red oak is the answer?
Thanks,
Andre
I recently had a Lopi Declaration installed and I've been using it for the past week or so. I like the stove. It looks great, seems well built and very easy to use. However, from reading posts on this forum, I though I would be able to easily hit 80 degrees in the room where the insert is installed. So far I've only been able to peak the family room temperature to 75 degrees.
So, some details...
The House
The insert is installed on the far wall of my family room which is 15' by 22'. The family room has cathedral ceilings (18' or so high) and I do have a ceiling fan (which I operate when the stove is going). All the away across the room (directly across the insert) is a 6' wide opening to the rest of the house... and where the thermostat is installed. The house is 3200 sq. ft with 10' ceilings on the first floor.... it was recently built and seems well insulated (this is my first winter here).
The Wood
I'm burning a mixture of ash and maple that I purchased. I measured the moisture content of freshly split wood and it's about 20%... with some pieces as high as 25%.
The Stove
No draft issues that I can see (30ft exterior chimney). To get the family room to hit 75 degrees, I first started the stove with 2 small splits and 2 medium splits. Temperature crept up to 67 (starting at 60). After having a good coal bed, I filled about 80% of the firebox (the Declaration has a 2.9 cubic ft fire box). I don't have a stove thermometer but the secondary air tubes were glowing red and I had a good secondary burn going. I also had the insert fan on max to pump out the heat.
So is it unreasonable to expect my family room to hit 80 degrees after the second load? Would I need another load of wood to get there... or is there something "wrong?" Or maybe I'm doing too good of a job getting the heat out of the family room and into the rest of the house

Thanks,
Andre