Greetings all,
Well...just had the experience of a lifetime and I'm trying to sort out what exactly were the precipitating factors and how to prevent them in the future. Here goes:
Weather today, which may be a factor: it was unseasonably warm today (high of 57). It was 44*F when this happened below. We didn't have gale force winds, but it is windier than usual (right now 15 mph with some gusts; a cold front is moving in currently).
What happened:
I came in to our kitchen where our KQ 380 had a small bit of coals left. I put on some maple and a little willow kindling to get the fire going to make dinner. Once it took off, I put on a two smaller logs (2-4" thick) to start up. About 10 minutes later (after the smaller logs were going), I put on a couple more smaller logs (same size) and waited for the stove to get up to temp to hopefully start to bake. Nothing unusual so far.
I then started prepping dinner and went back to the stove. The stovetop seemed to be getting a great deal warmer (faster than usual), so I turned the dampers down halfway or so (which usually works to slow a fire greatly in our KQ).
I put our dinner in the oven (it was 300 degrees in the oven by then), but left the oven damper closed to warm the firebox sid of the oven up a bit more. I went back to food prep and a few minutes later, I heard what sounded like a small BOOM and my glass pan in the stove seemed to have jumped. Odd. My guess at the time was that one of the logs had broken up from burning down and the wood on top of it dropped.
So, I went the to stove and opened up the door (the coals had appeared to die down, but the stovetop was still remaining quite hot). There was a whooshing flash of yellow fire that went from the bed of coals under the oven. I closed the door back quickly, turned down the dampers, and left it alone for a while (8-10 minutes). My worry was that it was creosote that caught fire (I don't believe this to be the case, because we work hard to keep our stove very clean, but it crossed my mind, since there are parts around the oven that we cannot reach to monitor for any buildup of creosote, etc.).
After the 10-minute wait, I went back to the stove again and messed with the dampers, since the coals were not glowing anymore at all. They lit back up with the dampers open a bit, but a poof of smoke came out the top damper. Odd. I shut the dampers down again.
From there I waited again for another 5 or so minutes and the stove appeared to be cooling down. So, again I opened up the damper a bit and the coals lit up. Everything appeared decent. I waited a while then opened the door and moved the coals around with the poker, not wanting a log to fall again (assuming that was the issue before). All seemed fine. I went back to food prep.
At that point, I kneeled on the floor in front of the stove with a flashlight to just check things out (I was still worried something was wrong), to try to see inside the stove to make sure everything was okay. Everything looked decent. The stovetop was still pretty warm, but the oven was starting to cool off. I opened the door to move the coals around a bit and a MASSIVE flash of white light and a bit of flames rushed out the doortoward my face, blowing the cover off the stovetop over the firebox. I slammed the door closed and shut everything down (including turning the thermostat down all the way on the back). So, yeah. Not cool. I'm fine, but it was dangerous for sure.
So, here's my theory--the wind and warm-ish temps were creating a poor draft and the flue gases built up in the stove. The wood/coals warmed the stovetop up quite a bit (oddly more than normal), but the gases were not escaping sufficiently enough for the amount of wood being burned. So, the gases blew up when I introduced air (O2) into the fire box.
Now, how to prevent this, if I'm correct? Totally freaked me out. Not gonna lie. I love my KQ, but this one scared the crap out of me. LOL Help?
Well...just had the experience of a lifetime and I'm trying to sort out what exactly were the precipitating factors and how to prevent them in the future. Here goes:
Weather today, which may be a factor: it was unseasonably warm today (high of 57). It was 44*F when this happened below. We didn't have gale force winds, but it is windier than usual (right now 15 mph with some gusts; a cold front is moving in currently).
What happened:
I came in to our kitchen where our KQ 380 had a small bit of coals left. I put on some maple and a little willow kindling to get the fire going to make dinner. Once it took off, I put on a two smaller logs (2-4" thick) to start up. About 10 minutes later (after the smaller logs were going), I put on a couple more smaller logs (same size) and waited for the stove to get up to temp to hopefully start to bake. Nothing unusual so far.
I then started prepping dinner and went back to the stove. The stovetop seemed to be getting a great deal warmer (faster than usual), so I turned the dampers down halfway or so (which usually works to slow a fire greatly in our KQ).
I put our dinner in the oven (it was 300 degrees in the oven by then), but left the oven damper closed to warm the firebox sid of the oven up a bit more. I went back to food prep and a few minutes later, I heard what sounded like a small BOOM and my glass pan in the stove seemed to have jumped. Odd. My guess at the time was that one of the logs had broken up from burning down and the wood on top of it dropped.
So, I went the to stove and opened up the door (the coals had appeared to die down, but the stovetop was still remaining quite hot). There was a whooshing flash of yellow fire that went from the bed of coals under the oven. I closed the door back quickly, turned down the dampers, and left it alone for a while (8-10 minutes). My worry was that it was creosote that caught fire (I don't believe this to be the case, because we work hard to keep our stove very clean, but it crossed my mind, since there are parts around the oven that we cannot reach to monitor for any buildup of creosote, etc.).
After the 10-minute wait, I went back to the stove again and messed with the dampers, since the coals were not glowing anymore at all. They lit back up with the dampers open a bit, but a poof of smoke came out the top damper. Odd. I shut the dampers down again.
From there I waited again for another 5 or so minutes and the stove appeared to be cooling down. So, again I opened up the damper a bit and the coals lit up. Everything appeared decent. I waited a while then opened the door and moved the coals around with the poker, not wanting a log to fall again (assuming that was the issue before). All seemed fine. I went back to food prep.
At that point, I kneeled on the floor in front of the stove with a flashlight to just check things out (I was still worried something was wrong), to try to see inside the stove to make sure everything was okay. Everything looked decent. The stovetop was still pretty warm, but the oven was starting to cool off. I opened the door to move the coals around a bit and a MASSIVE flash of white light and a bit of flames rushed out the doortoward my face, blowing the cover off the stovetop over the firebox. I slammed the door closed and shut everything down (including turning the thermostat down all the way on the back). So, yeah. Not cool. I'm fine, but it was dangerous for sure.
So, here's my theory--the wind and warm-ish temps were creating a poor draft and the flue gases built up in the stove. The wood/coals warmed the stovetop up quite a bit (oddly more than normal), but the gases were not escaping sufficiently enough for the amount of wood being burned. So, the gases blew up when I introduced air (O2) into the fire box.
Now, how to prevent this, if I'm correct? Totally freaked me out. Not gonna lie. I love my KQ, but this one scared the crap out of me. LOL Help?