I'm a noob. I've been burning as my primary heat source for about two weeks now and searched nearly 50 pages of threads on various topics so far. The owner's manual for my Russo stove has no information on how to adjust the controls for optimum burning. So I'm still experimenting with settings. Today I bought a thermometer which I stuck on the stove top. The stove has an intake air control in the ash drawer door and a damper at the top. I just discovered today that keeping the damper open all the way is not ideal. Doh!
Here are the issues I'm focusing on so far - do these make any sense? What am I missing?
Is the objective to keep the stove at a target temperature, burning more slowly with a full load to last the night, or more quickly at startup or reload to get back to the target range?
If I burn at optimum temperature, I should have the least amount of ash and glass blackening, and the longest burn times per load?
If I burn too hot, then I am using wood too fast and overheating the rooms? This, I imagine, is long before running so hot to risk a chimney fire. (Another engine company in my town got dispatched to a chimney fire about an hour ago.)
What is that optimal temperature, measured on the stove top?
Some things I've noticed so far:
1. If I have fewer than 3 splits going, it's hard to get above 300 deg. With 3 going well, I have the intake about 1/2 open and the damper almost closed - this gets the temp up to 380-420 and nice blue flames. With the air intake open 1/4 or less, the flames disappear and temp drops. With the intake open 3/4 or more it flames up quickly - good for startup, but a waste of wood afterwards?
Would it be right that a more full stove (I've never had more than 4 splits in it at once), burning more slowly, would keep the temp up and maybe last the night?
2. If I open the damper even as much as halfway (45 deg), temp goes down. I'm guessing that too much hot gas is drafting up the chimney too fast.
3. I have to open the damper for a few seconds before opening the door to reload so that smoke doesn't go into the room.
4. With the stove at 400 deg and the blower on full, it's easy to keep my home office (about 400 sf) at 68 deg. and the adjoining rooms at 63 deg when it's 30 deg. outside. I seem to be burning at the rate of one 12-14" split per hour.
I'd like to get the most heat over time from the least wood possible that maintains comfortable temperatures in the four rooms. All advice is welcome.
Thanks.
Here are the issues I'm focusing on so far - do these make any sense? What am I missing?
Is the objective to keep the stove at a target temperature, burning more slowly with a full load to last the night, or more quickly at startup or reload to get back to the target range?
If I burn at optimum temperature, I should have the least amount of ash and glass blackening, and the longest burn times per load?
If I burn too hot, then I am using wood too fast and overheating the rooms? This, I imagine, is long before running so hot to risk a chimney fire. (Another engine company in my town got dispatched to a chimney fire about an hour ago.)
What is that optimal temperature, measured on the stove top?
Some things I've noticed so far:
1. If I have fewer than 3 splits going, it's hard to get above 300 deg. With 3 going well, I have the intake about 1/2 open and the damper almost closed - this gets the temp up to 380-420 and nice blue flames. With the air intake open 1/4 or less, the flames disappear and temp drops. With the intake open 3/4 or more it flames up quickly - good for startup, but a waste of wood afterwards?
Would it be right that a more full stove (I've never had more than 4 splits in it at once), burning more slowly, would keep the temp up and maybe last the night?
2. If I open the damper even as much as halfway (45 deg), temp goes down. I'm guessing that too much hot gas is drafting up the chimney too fast.
3. I have to open the damper for a few seconds before opening the door to reload so that smoke doesn't go into the room.
4. With the stove at 400 deg and the blower on full, it's easy to keep my home office (about 400 sf) at 68 deg. and the adjoining rooms at 63 deg when it's 30 deg. outside. I seem to be burning at the rate of one 12-14" split per hour.
I'd like to get the most heat over time from the least wood possible that maintains comfortable temperatures in the four rooms. All advice is welcome.
Thanks.