Okay sort of, it's definately a lot more controlled! When I got my wood this year I measured a fresh split at 12-14%. This burned great, too well actually. I fought and fought to keep the stove under 750 (manual says to not exceed 700 surface temp). I installed a damper, modified the secondary intake with magnets. Even tossed some fresh cut soaking wet cedar on top of raging infernos to bring the temp down. I checked all seals over and over.
Well go figure, the weather around here is just nuts. -16 one day and +10 Celsius the next. With crazy winds, rain, sleet and snow. Unfortunately my tarped wood didn't have a chance...it's mostly soaking wet now. BUT, no more insane fires and 30 degree house. Now I have a bit more difficulty getting the fire going, but instead of an hour at 700 with a quick cools down to reload time, now I get several hours at 450-550 degrees. Then it slowly works it's way to 300 degrees and by morning I have a 150-200 degree stove with a small amount of coal left over for the reload. As opposed to large chunks of coal and a cold stove, due to the damper and draft being closed all the way to try to keep the fire from going insane while I slept. Now I just need to keep an eye on creosote build up.
Ian
Well go figure, the weather around here is just nuts. -16 one day and +10 Celsius the next. With crazy winds, rain, sleet and snow. Unfortunately my tarped wood didn't have a chance...it's mostly soaking wet now. BUT, no more insane fires and 30 degree house. Now I have a bit more difficulty getting the fire going, but instead of an hour at 700 with a quick cools down to reload time, now I get several hours at 450-550 degrees. Then it slowly works it's way to 300 degrees and by morning I have a 150-200 degree stove with a small amount of coal left over for the reload. As opposed to large chunks of coal and a cold stove, due to the damper and draft being closed all the way to try to keep the fire from going insane while I slept. Now I just need to keep an eye on creosote build up.
Ian