rudysmallfry said:
I really do not think it is the wood. I scored some very nice Oak in the spring of 2009. That gave it a year and a half to season which should be perfect for a freshly cut tree if I'm not mistaken. I get the fire going with higher heat woods like Cherry and Hickory and then switch to the Oak and Maple after I'm in secondary burn mode.
And earlier you wrote, "Definitely no wet wood in play. If anything, it’s over seasoned."
When someone has problems like this I always first look at the fuel. It is the same with a car, truck or tractor. They don't perform, very often it is the fuel.
My first question has to be, what is over seasoned wood? Personally, I've never seen such a thing and we've burned wood that was 10 years in the stack and it burned absolutely wonderful. We regularly burn wood 6-8 years in the stack as has been posted on this forum many times.
If we burn oak, we do not give it a year and a half to season....we do not attempt to burn it until it has been split and stacked for 3 years. Sorry, but oak gives up its moisture very reluctantly. Yes, there are members on this forum who burn oak sooner and maybe they have different oak that we have but we just do not get decent fires from oak until it has seasoned for 3 years or more. I cut some oak today and based on what we have for wood at present we will not get at this oak until the winter of 2016-2017. It should burn very well then.
There very well may be other factors that are affecting the output of heat from your stove, but I'm betting the fuel is a big contributor of your problems. Good luck on solving this.