Hey there,
I've looked around at other feed rate posts but I haven't found a clear answer yet. I'm running a Harman Absolute43 and the default feed limit is 65% (range is 25-100). I've found that during mild weather or shoulder seasons, the stove cycles a lot. My preference would be for fewer cycles and a more modest flame/heat output. I'm trained to think that more cycles means more wear on certain components, but also I don't really like the stove kicking on for 10 minutes every 15 minutes.
My question is, is it inefficient (wasting pellets) to run the stove as I would prefer, with a lower feed limit? How have other folks managed this issue during shoulder seasons or mild winter weather? I'm current using a feed limit of 35% and it seems to burn much longer but not as hot. I'm in western Oregon.
Cheers,
Matt
I've looked around at other feed rate posts but I haven't found a clear answer yet. I'm running a Harman Absolute43 and the default feed limit is 65% (range is 25-100). I've found that during mild weather or shoulder seasons, the stove cycles a lot. My preference would be for fewer cycles and a more modest flame/heat output. I'm trained to think that more cycles means more wear on certain components, but also I don't really like the stove kicking on for 10 minutes every 15 minutes.
My question is, is it inefficient (wasting pellets) to run the stove as I would prefer, with a lower feed limit? How have other folks managed this issue during shoulder seasons or mild winter weather? I'm current using a feed limit of 35% and it seems to burn much longer but not as hot. I'm in western Oregon.
Cheers,
Matt