I'm a new Craftsbury owner looking for any advice from seasoned geeks out there. We've installed a new Craftsbury in the living room of our three-story, 1600 sq-ft, 1918 house in Pittsburgh. The stove sits just in front of the original fireplace area that was originally used for coal or gas. We demo'd the decrepit masonry chimney to the roofline and blocked the rest
and punched a hole through the wall to run a couple feet of stove pipe from the rear exit out to a 90-degree chimney base, and then about 21 feet of exterior chimney. All Selkirk Supervent 6" installed to code. We're hoping to So far I'm happy with the install and draft and just have some fine-tuning questions.
1. Burning observations/advice. Is there a pronounced direction of burn, like front to back? Are there dead spots to avoid or definitely leave clear for airflow?
2. Loading advice. Seems like leaving ample space clear in the front helps air flow, but then how to maximize load?
3. Ideal split size. I was orginally assuming 16" loaded horizontally, but now I'm wondering if smaller lengths of 9-12", loaded straight in, might better use the space when trying to load up for the night. (I got a load of wood that was frustratingly just too long for the firebox, so took a chainsaw to it, leaving me with a pile of short splits that would be good for this.)
4. Fine tuning the air intake lever. The instruction manual says the difference between closed/"Low" ("not advisable") and "Medium Low" ("typical setting") is "a little less than 1/4 inch." Any insights on this? I can feel a free play of *maybe* a 1/4 inch between the hard-stop closed position and where some friction starts. Would that be the "Medium Low typical setting"? And then sliding further with friction is heading toward Medium? Or should I be starting that 1/4 inch when I start feeling the friction?
5. Best way and interval to remove ash while still in use.
6. Best way to keep glass clean.
7. Any other tips and tricks?
Thanks!
and punched a hole through the wall to run a couple feet of stove pipe from the rear exit out to a 90-degree chimney base, and then about 21 feet of exterior chimney. All Selkirk Supervent 6" installed to code. We're hoping to So far I'm happy with the install and draft and just have some fine-tuning questions. 1. Burning observations/advice. Is there a pronounced direction of burn, like front to back? Are there dead spots to avoid or definitely leave clear for airflow?
2. Loading advice. Seems like leaving ample space clear in the front helps air flow, but then how to maximize load?
3. Ideal split size. I was orginally assuming 16" loaded horizontally, but now I'm wondering if smaller lengths of 9-12", loaded straight in, might better use the space when trying to load up for the night. (I got a load of wood that was frustratingly just too long for the firebox, so took a chainsaw to it, leaving me with a pile of short splits that would be good for this.)
4. Fine tuning the air intake lever. The instruction manual says the difference between closed/"Low" ("not advisable") and "Medium Low" ("typical setting") is "a little less than 1/4 inch." Any insights on this? I can feel a free play of *maybe* a 1/4 inch between the hard-stop closed position and where some friction starts. Would that be the "Medium Low typical setting"? And then sliding further with friction is heading toward Medium? Or should I be starting that 1/4 inch when I start feeling the friction?
5. Best way and interval to remove ash while still in use.
6. Best way to keep glass clean.
7. Any other tips and tricks?
Thanks!