Well the starting and ending materials are the same (smoke + O2) -> (CO2 +H2O) but the cat enables the reaction to happen at a lower temperature.Not sure. I know typical combustion requires fuel and air. But a cat is partly a chemical reaction to the gasses the wood produces when it smolders. When you cut air to the burning fire you create more smoke/gasses. Im sure air is required for the cat process but I would guess less is required then for normal combustion?
So yes I probably choked the fire too fast and created a puff of smoke that made the cat temperature shoot up. But then shouldn't it gradually calm down after that, even with excess air? I'm just thinking out loud here
![[Hearth.com] Intrepid II cat too hot, had trouble getting the temp down [Hearth.com] Intrepid II cat too hot, had trouble getting the temp down](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/271/271028-5e426f7951c68b9a740eb89d0f3261c2.jpg?hash=qu7SyiXOhn)
![[Hearth.com] Intrepid II cat too hot, had trouble getting the temp down [Hearth.com] Intrepid II cat too hot, had trouble getting the temp down](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/271/271031-7772eee472a697f2c092b06be13f2309.jpg?hash=B-AQgcEHam)
![[Hearth.com] Intrepid II cat too hot, had trouble getting the temp down [Hearth.com] Intrepid II cat too hot, had trouble getting the temp down](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/271/271041-48c1fb6b908ab64b4cdaf0aadaedca2e.jpg?hash=Br6tqOUCMy)