Hearthstone shelburne. 8372 air intake not working well. Fire burns well with door ajar but gets choked when door is closed

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Treeski

New Member
Sep 7, 2021
1
Plymouth nh
Brand new stove I can’t get the air intake to work well. I have had three small break in fires. But when the door is shut the fire gets starved of air. It still burns/ glows but at a really slow rate. I examined the intact hole in bottom seems okay. The air comes out the Lapo. Lower air primary port in the center bottom of the main stove. They are two openings here one circular about the size of a dime the other is a rectangular slot that is filled with gasket material. My question is should this material have been taking out during assembly or is it supposed to be there?
 
Brand new stove I can’t get the air intake to work well. I have had three small break in fires. But when the door is shut the fire gets starved of air. It still burns/ glows but at a really slow rate. I examined the intact hole in bottom seems okay. The air comes out the Lapo. Lower air primary port in the center bottom of the main stove. They are two openings here one circular about the size of a dime the other is a rectangular slot that is filled with gasket material. My question is should this material have been taking out during assembly or is it supposed to be there?
It is most likely either wet wood or exterior temps are to high leading to low draft
 
This complaint with a new stove is common at this time of year with new stove owners. Assume that the stove is ok.

Weak draft can be due to several factors. Tell us about the flue system. How tall is it from stovetop to chimney cap? Are there any 90º turns in the flue path? What was the outside temperature?

Have you tested the wood for moisture content? Do you know when it was split?
 
I can tell you that it’s a hard time of year to burn in any stove because it’s still pretty warm. We had a small fire last night and it was a chore to get the fire going and I was getting smoke in the room until I got things stoked. I really didn’t have any performance until there was quite a bit of heat in the flu.

it’s no coincidence there are lots of people with smoke issues, weak draft, and underwhelming performance this time of year.
 
Yes, it's the most common complaint we see here every fall. People immediately want to blame the stove, but 99% of the time it is another issue. Higher altitude installations with shorter chimneys may have more issues than flatlanders.
 
Brand new stove I can’t get the air intake to work well. I have had three small break in fires. But when the door is shut the fire gets starved of air. It still burns/ glows but at a really slow rate. I examined the intact hole in bottom seems okay. The air comes out the Lapo. Lower air primary port in the center bottom of the main stove. They are two openings here one circular about the size of a dime the other is a rectangular slot that is filled with gasket material. My question is should this material have been taking out during assembly or is it supposed to be there?
Can you show or describe where this gasket material is? I have owned a shelburne for years and have struggled with poor air intake.
As mentioned already it is tough to get a strong draft with mild temps.
 
I agree with @begreen assume the stove is ok for now. Id check the wood supply first with a moisture meter. your wood needs to read 20% MC on a freshly split face with the pins going with the grain. Do not test on the end of split as the outside is the driest. Also light the stove on a cold morning and see how it runs instead of a warmer afternoon or evening. One of the things you need to do is start ruling out the variables before one rips apart his stove.. What your describing sounds like wet wood and or poor draft or a little of both. Having wet wood has a cooling effect. Your fires not as hot, your not heating the chimney to keep up good draft because there's alot of moisture cooling things down. People sell wood and say its seasoned. Really it was probably split 2 months before you got it and it sat in a pile and got rained on.
 
Have the same stove, also new to me. I'm having my own issues but I can tell you that adding "sleepers" N/S loaded on the bottom to prop up the rest of the wood during startup allowed me to sustain a fire. Top down startup is also a must. I was loading E/W and per other's suggestions this could have been choking the fir of fresh air on startup. The sleepers leave air channels since the air inlet is in the front bottom. Since the firebox is shallow i had to purposes cut a bunch of wood short to be able to stack sleepers on the bottom then E/W medium splits, then cut large kindle N/S, then small kindling E/W, then paper on top with wood scraps on top of that and filled in openings with crumbled paper.
 
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Have the same stove, also new to me. I'm having my own issues but I can tell you that adding "sleepers" N/S loaded on the bottom to prop up the rest of the wood during startup allowed me to sustain a fire. Top down startup is also a must. I was loading E/W and per other's suggestions this could have been choking the fir of fresh air on startup. The sleepers leave air channels since the air inlet is in the front bottom. Since the firebox is shallow i had to purposes cut a bunch of wood short to be able to stack sleepers on the bottom then E/W medium splits, then cut large kindle N/S, then small kindling E/W, then paper on top with wood scraps on top of that and filled in openings with crumbled paper.

Wow.. that sounds like a PITA..
 
Wow.. that sounds like a PITA..
I basically start my F400 this way every time. You set the short pieces aside or I just cut my kindling in half with my ax when I split it. I don’t find it any more time consuming than when I was building a regular bottom start fire.
 
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Have the same stove, also new to me. I'm having my own issues but I can tell you that adding "sleepers" N/S loaded on the bottom to prop up the rest of the wood during startup allowed me to sustain a fire. Top down startup is also a must. I was loading E/W and per other's suggestions this could have been choking the fir of fresh air on startup. The sleepers leave air channels since the air inlet is in the front bottom. Since the firebox is shallow i had to purposes cut a bunch of wood short to be able to stack sleepers on the bottom then E/W medium splits, then cut large kindle N/S, then small kindling E/W, then paper on top with wood scraps on top of that and filled in openings with crumbled paper.
I am coming late to this party, but I just got a Shelburne installed (in my not yet completed new home) this summer. I did a few break in fires on cool mornings early fall, then I began making fires more often about 4 weeks ago . Now it is wood stove temps here in Maine. I won't bore you with the details of different hits and misses with getting fires started (including the teepee method which is what they recommend in the manual). I'll just say that even though I could get a fire going every day and eventually reach CAT activation, it was hours of standing over the stove and poking and prodding and opening and closing things.
I searched online and found this thread and I CANNOT SAY THANK YOU ENOUGH!!
The top down method is KEY. It is a thing of amazement. After reading this I did a little more searching and discovered the Hearthstone company itself has a Youtube video of the top down method using the even smaller Canterbury. The first morning I tried it after reading this and watching the video, I set it up, lit the thing and shut the door and watched the whole time, to be sure it worked and I understood it. The only thing I had to do was push a couple pieces a bit closer together midpoint. Air space is important but not too much. The next morning I made those small spacing adjustments, lit it, watched in amazement again. The entire thing is on fire in 30 minutes without having to open the door or touch a single thing. I am on day eight with this method and I am so pleased. Every time, even when it looks like, hmmm, the stuff on top is slowing down and going out, just wait, all of a sudden the next layer is in flames, and especially once some of the small top embers have fallen down to the bottom they are going to start those big boys on the bottom every time.
I've attached a couple pix here of my set up following the video.
I'm thankful for this forum and hopefully can share helpful info as well!

IMG_5850.jpg IMG_5852.jpg
 
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