I did a regular old reload today nothing fancy and the load wasn’t too big. Unfortunately I walked away with air open and the fan off and forgot about it - darn work from home snow days... I smelled the curing paint smell everyone talks about with a new stove. Not too strong but strong enough to make me remember the insert
I turned the air down and the fan on high. I took a temp with the IR gun and noticed some light glowing around the collar.
The fire reacted well to turning down the air and got under control pretty easy I did crack the door and then a quick open and close. The glowing went away in a minute or two.
Since then the fires been perfectly normal.
So obviously glowing is bad. And I’ll let the stove go cold and check it tomorrow. I can poke my head in and check the first few feet of the liner from inside. Chimney is too high to check from the top. Taking the surround off is a pain but I think I should do that as well.
Anything else that I should look at? Obviously cracks and holes are an easy indication of bad things. Anything else that may not be obvious?
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I turned the air down and the fan on high. I took a temp with the IR gun and noticed some light glowing around the collar.
The fire reacted well to turning down the air and got under control pretty easy I did crack the door and then a quick open and close. The glowing went away in a minute or two.
Since then the fires been perfectly normal.
So obviously glowing is bad. And I’ll let the stove go cold and check it tomorrow. I can poke my head in and check the first few feet of the liner from inside. Chimney is too high to check from the top. Taking the surround off is a pain but I think I should do that as well.
Anything else that I should look at? Obviously cracks and holes are an easy indication of bad things. Anything else that may not be obvious?
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
![[Hearth.com] I overfired my stove - now what? [Hearth.com] I overfired my stove - now what?](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/224/224387-c987d18f53dba630c427686e3f4cbcb4.jpg?hash=-papAj92md)
Train everyone in the house to be mindful of the stove and flue temps. If this becomes a frequent issue consider getting a high temp alarm for the stove.