It's been in the 50's, rainy and windy all day with no sunlight so the house was a tad chilly (71F is cold by my wife's standard--TRUST ME). This gave me a great opportunity to start our first fire :D
Some background-
The house I bought last year included 2 woodstoves, a Jotul #8 downstairs (pre-EPA non-catalytic, with the draft wheel air control, can also burn coal with the proper grates) and a Defiant II (1980) upstairs. The chimney is one of those dreaded massive 12x12's with both devices venting into the same flue liner, i.e. code violating. Flue length is about 20ft for the Jotul and 10ft for the Defiant.
I haven't lined it yet b/c I don't want to give up one or the other stove just yet, but for now I've blocked off the Defiant's thimble as it's the bigger stove and when we used it last winter, it would roast us out of the house in a hurry
The Jotul was a neat stove b/c it has glass in the door (the Defiant does not) so we could see the fire. However usually when I fired it up with pallet wood or even with woodbrickfuel (ala BioBricks), the glass would darken or go completely black along with clouds of smoke billowing over the lawn. Moreso with pallets than with the woodbrickfuel.
Fast forward to this summer, I did a total R&R on the Jotul including new gaskets for the stovetop and door and new stovepipes and fully vacuumed/scrubbed ashes out of the firebox and outside the steel burn plates inside.
After doing all that cleanup work, with the first fire I gotta say the stove performs *much* much better than it did last year. The glass hasn't darkened much at all (I would say it hasn't darkened at *all* except I see a slight tint when I open up the door and look through the inside of the door glass back into the room) and the flames became lively almost 5min after ignition. The flames have stayed lively the entire burn so far (maybe ~45min into it) and while there is some smoke coming from the chimney, it's really not much. I think the key here, besides the gaskets, is the fact that secondary air can now make it into the firebox reliably since I removed the ash and crud that collected behind the steel burn plates (which is where secondary air comes into the firebox; through the lower half of the draft wheel, under the firebox, up around the side steel plates and into the upper firebox). I think that may have contributed to its poor performance last year by causing the draft to be satisfied by primary air more than secondary air, thus rushing the pyrolysis of the wood and production of smoke.
Stovetop temp is in the mid-to-low 400's and not climbing much beyond that, but I did only use a 5-brick fire which is frankly the minimum I've found works for these stoves (both the Jotul and the Defiant). A 6- or 8- brick fire usually gives me those 600-700F temps. Consider each brick is 2lb, I only have 10lb of wood in there right now.
All in all, this is a lesson that stoves really *do* work much better when they're clean and sealed up properly. The fire is beautiful and while I took some pics I'm too lazy to upload them right now :D
Some background-
The house I bought last year included 2 woodstoves, a Jotul #8 downstairs (pre-EPA non-catalytic, with the draft wheel air control, can also burn coal with the proper grates) and a Defiant II (1980) upstairs. The chimney is one of those dreaded massive 12x12's with both devices venting into the same flue liner, i.e. code violating. Flue length is about 20ft for the Jotul and 10ft for the Defiant.
I haven't lined it yet b/c I don't want to give up one or the other stove just yet, but for now I've blocked off the Defiant's thimble as it's the bigger stove and when we used it last winter, it would roast us out of the house in a hurry

The Jotul was a neat stove b/c it has glass in the door (the Defiant does not) so we could see the fire. However usually when I fired it up with pallet wood or even with woodbrickfuel (ala BioBricks), the glass would darken or go completely black along with clouds of smoke billowing over the lawn. Moreso with pallets than with the woodbrickfuel.
Fast forward to this summer, I did a total R&R on the Jotul including new gaskets for the stovetop and door and new stovepipes and fully vacuumed/scrubbed ashes out of the firebox and outside the steel burn plates inside.
After doing all that cleanup work, with the first fire I gotta say the stove performs *much* much better than it did last year. The glass hasn't darkened much at all (I would say it hasn't darkened at *all* except I see a slight tint when I open up the door and look through the inside of the door glass back into the room) and the flames became lively almost 5min after ignition. The flames have stayed lively the entire burn so far (maybe ~45min into it) and while there is some smoke coming from the chimney, it's really not much. I think the key here, besides the gaskets, is the fact that secondary air can now make it into the firebox reliably since I removed the ash and crud that collected behind the steel burn plates (which is where secondary air comes into the firebox; through the lower half of the draft wheel, under the firebox, up around the side steel plates and into the upper firebox). I think that may have contributed to its poor performance last year by causing the draft to be satisfied by primary air more than secondary air, thus rushing the pyrolysis of the wood and production of smoke.
Stovetop temp is in the mid-to-low 400's and not climbing much beyond that, but I did only use a 5-brick fire which is frankly the minimum I've found works for these stoves (both the Jotul and the Defiant). A 6- or 8- brick fire usually gives me those 600-700F temps. Consider each brick is 2lb, I only have 10lb of wood in there right now.
All in all, this is a lesson that stoves really *do* work much better when they're clean and sealed up properly. The fire is beautiful and while I took some pics I'm too lazy to upload them right now :D