dolphins1lrb said:
yukiginger said:
If you want help with perhaps improving your burn times (and therefore saving a ton of money by not having to buy a new stove) give us details on your wood, your air control/burning, how full you are loading, etc. I am in Rochester (can't be far from you) and I burn 5+ full cords easily in a 2.5 cu. ft. Quadrafire insert. I also awoke to plenty of coals this morning so I could reload and relight with minimum effort (after loading it up 8 1/2 hours earlier.
MarkG
Mostly hardwoods with at least 1 full year of drying, keeping air control to minimum open and loading to full capacity.
Okay - back to the burn time issue, then. You say you get 6 hours max on a good night. How do you define burn time - active flames, any burning coals remaining, just a few embers? As we all know the manufacturers are very generous with their burn times. For me, if I can stir up what remains, give it full air for a while and get some coals glowing hot, then reload as I would when starting fresh - with large splits as well as a little kindling on those coals - then this was in my "burn time window." Granted, there was almost no heat being thrown by then, but the unit is still warm.
The Liberty you have is the largest unit made by one of the best manufacturers in the business. If you have money to throw away, then go for something else, but I don't know how much of an improvement you will get. That is, of course, assuming your stove is operating properly, which I can't really determine at this point, but it sounds fine.
MarkG