My old Sedley insert has a cavernous firebox, ~ 29 x 22 x 18". Way bigger than needed for a 2,000-sq-ft 2-story house. Firebrick, standing on end, lines the sides and back, reaching halfway up the walls and filling the center of the floor with brick lying flat.  I'm thinking of buying a few six-packs of firebrick and stacking them flat instead of standing on end along the walls.  I probably wouldn't  go higher than they now stand, due to $, but the thickness of my brick lining would increase to 4". . .can't think of a good way to attach them flat against the walls to go higher than 9" without drilling holes in the box, unless cement would hold them. I'm also thinking of moving the floor brick to the walls and covering the floor with sand instead, also covered with a few inches of ash.  Does any of this sound like a good idea? Will smaller fires burn better in a smaller box? Can something of a 'soapstone effect' be achieved by stacking lots of brick in a steel box?
	
		
			
		
		
	
				
			 
	 
	 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 Highbeam, more efficient burning with smaller fires is exactly what I'm after. I have read that smaller stoves are better for burning smaller fires, which is what I need in a relatively small house. The pre-EPA stove here is apparently SupaSize by modern standards, so I thought reducing the volume of the firebox might be a good idea.  ML, I don't think there's much of a baffle in the top of the stove. There is a plate a few inches below the the exhaust vent at the center of the top rear corner of the firebox, but that plate is only ~ 18 x 10" on a 29 x 22" ceiling...I don't know how much it may baffle, but I have seen smoke circulating down the walls when I crack the door open. Are you suggesting that the upper stove will run hotter if I stack more bricks in the lower part? It's an insert, so forced air circulates around the top & sides of the firebox. Thermostatically controlled. The flue passes through the top heat exchange area, so it gets cooled too. . .
   Highbeam, more efficient burning with smaller fires is exactly what I'm after. I have read that smaller stoves are better for burning smaller fires, which is what I need in a relatively small house. The pre-EPA stove here is apparently SupaSize by modern standards, so I thought reducing the volume of the firebox might be a good idea.  ML, I don't think there's much of a baffle in the top of the stove. There is a plate a few inches below the the exhaust vent at the center of the top rear corner of the firebox, but that plate is only ~ 18 x 10" on a 29 x 22" ceiling...I don't know how much it may baffle, but I have seen smoke circulating down the walls when I crack the door open. Are you suggesting that the upper stove will run hotter if I stack more bricks in the lower part? It's an insert, so forced air circulates around the top & sides of the firebox. Thermostatically controlled. The flue passes through the top heat exchange area, so it gets cooled too. . . 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		