How necessary is baffle insulation?

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CRJ700

Member
Dec 22, 2017
36
Long Island
I noticed on my Osburn 1800 Insert its missing about half the insulation.(I must have vacuumed it up) I plan on ordering some more. Can I still burn with out it for now?
 
Its really not an issue, the drolet version of those stoves doesn't have any insulation and then work just fine. Once your fire box is hot, it doesn't much matter. Probably comes into play on heat up and for the EPA numbers though.
 
Its really not an issue, the drolet version of those stoves doesn't have any insulation and then work just fine. Once your fire box is hot, it doesn't much matter. Probably comes into play on heat up and for the EPA numbers though.
I have the opposite to say, my parents have a country wood stove insert (circa 2005) the insert is a well made stove with a fire brick baffle, on top of that is an insulation blanket, over the years the blanket fell apart, my dad removed it for a season and burned same as always.. he had a lot more creosote build up / smokier fires that season, he was using dry wood. He had the chimney guy order a new blanket and his clean burns returned the following season, he went from clumpy creosote to a nice fine powder. Short story, the blanket works.
 
I would want to use the stove as intended and to its full potential. Why send all that heat being lost up the flue and not in the stove and in your home.
 
I would want to use the stove as intended and to its full potential. Why send all that heat being lost up the flue and not in the stove and in your home.
Ordered a replacement was just curious if it was okay to burn it like this until it came. Thanks for the replies!
 
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Ordered a replacement was just curious if it was okay to burn it like this until it came. Thanks for the replies!
Yes you can burn without it, the stove will actually burn slightly cooler, you may not even notice it, but the fire box will be cooler disrupting the optimal reburn setup, with the epa reburn stoves, the primary fire burns, the cooler smoke stays low and gets reburnt, the hotter flue gas goes above the baffle and out the chimney.