Hi all! New member here and I was hoping you could help a greenhorn who knows nothing about wood stoves with a problem.
I am building a 600 sq. ft. home with loft and cathedral ceiling (20 ft. high). It is dried in but as yet uninsulated. I recently acquired a Vermont Castings aspen wood stove and have just finished installing it and can not get it to burn with the door closed. I have taken it apart and inspected and cleaned it. Everything looks good but as I said I'm new at this so I'm not exactly sure what to look for.
I am using a well seasoned mix of mostly juniper, and the rest pinion pine and scrub oak. Not the most prime fuel I realize but its what I have and I am not buying any. I can get a real hot fire going but if I close the door it slowly dies. Even after burning for several hours and developing a nice bed of coals (a struggle!) I can add wood and if I close the door it will not light and more or less just smolder. If I open the door it will light and start to produce heat. With the door cracked just a hair it becomes a raging inferno and I have experimented with getting a lot of good fuel really going until everything is hot and then closing the door and same thing- fire goes out and coals turn from red to black. Heat goes down.
The stove vents through 16 foot of single wall pipe connected to 6 ft. class A chimney, which exits near the peak of the roof. After installing I read you should only have 8 ft. of single wall above the stove so I will at some time fix that but I don't think that has to do with my problem.
So the fire is not getting air, that is apparent. I thought the air vents were clear but I will check them again, maybe try and blow compressed air through them..
After getting the stove, which seemed like a good deal (no cash involved), I have learned that that particular model is somewhat of a dog and a bit undersized for what I need anyway. I will be on the lookout for another but for now I thought if I could get this one running properly it could at least take the edge off the cold while I work through the winter.
Sorry for the long winded approach to what is most likely a simple problem. Appreciate any and all help.
I am building a 600 sq. ft. home with loft and cathedral ceiling (20 ft. high). It is dried in but as yet uninsulated. I recently acquired a Vermont Castings aspen wood stove and have just finished installing it and can not get it to burn with the door closed. I have taken it apart and inspected and cleaned it. Everything looks good but as I said I'm new at this so I'm not exactly sure what to look for.
I am using a well seasoned mix of mostly juniper, and the rest pinion pine and scrub oak. Not the most prime fuel I realize but its what I have and I am not buying any. I can get a real hot fire going but if I close the door it slowly dies. Even after burning for several hours and developing a nice bed of coals (a struggle!) I can add wood and if I close the door it will not light and more or less just smolder. If I open the door it will light and start to produce heat. With the door cracked just a hair it becomes a raging inferno and I have experimented with getting a lot of good fuel really going until everything is hot and then closing the door and same thing- fire goes out and coals turn from red to black. Heat goes down.
The stove vents through 16 foot of single wall pipe connected to 6 ft. class A chimney, which exits near the peak of the roof. After installing I read you should only have 8 ft. of single wall above the stove so I will at some time fix that but I don't think that has to do with my problem.
So the fire is not getting air, that is apparent. I thought the air vents were clear but I will check them again, maybe try and blow compressed air through them..
After getting the stove, which seemed like a good deal (no cash involved), I have learned that that particular model is somewhat of a dog and a bit undersized for what I need anyway. I will be on the lookout for another but for now I thought if I could get this one running properly it could at least take the edge off the cold while I work through the winter.
Sorry for the long winded approach to what is most likely a simple problem. Appreciate any and all help.
More so that you not only burn one, but have pretty much taken it apart and now know it's workings, and apperantly, it's Achilles heal..