I've been reading quite a bit on flue temps and am a bit confused, more so on the low end.
I've heard flue temps above 400deg are best. However, when researching things here I found several references to temps as low as 250deg in that above that is recommended for keeping creosote from condensing.
As for water vapor - being above the boiling point of water, at 212deg F, would seem to make sense and this lines up closer to the 250deg F temp - that 250 is hot enough for water vapor to flow right up and out rather easily.
Are the references to 250deg F in fact in reference to limiting creosote condensing? Or does that temp really need to be up over 400deg?
On the high end it sounds like running temps may be 800-1000deg F during the high end of a burn cycle. Anything over 1000deg F should be avoided. Is this true for all flue pipes? Or double or triple wall stove pipe?
Depending on which way the numbers go - the normal operational range sounds like it could be 250-800deg, 250-1000deg, 400-800deg, or 400-1000deg.
The temps I am referencing are gas temps in the flue, not surface temps of single wall pipe. It appears there is a 30-50% reduction in temp for a single wall flue pipe surface temp compared to what the exhaust gas temp is going through it.
I've heard flue temps above 400deg are best. However, when researching things here I found several references to temps as low as 250deg in that above that is recommended for keeping creosote from condensing.
As for water vapor - being above the boiling point of water, at 212deg F, would seem to make sense and this lines up closer to the 250deg F temp - that 250 is hot enough for water vapor to flow right up and out rather easily.
Are the references to 250deg F in fact in reference to limiting creosote condensing? Or does that temp really need to be up over 400deg?
On the high end it sounds like running temps may be 800-1000deg F during the high end of a burn cycle. Anything over 1000deg F should be avoided. Is this true for all flue pipes? Or double or triple wall stove pipe?
Depending on which way the numbers go - the normal operational range sounds like it could be 250-800deg, 250-1000deg, 400-800deg, or 400-1000deg.
The temps I am referencing are gas temps in the flue, not surface temps of single wall pipe. It appears there is a 30-50% reduction in temp for a single wall flue pipe surface temp compared to what the exhaust gas temp is going through it.