Hello everyone! You've coached me through installing the Englander 30 in the spring, you've coached me through burning better fires in the fall.....now its time to get some better burn times!
Just so we're on the same page...
- Englander 30
- 6ft double wall stove pipe
- 16ft double wall chimney pipe
- My wood is red oak, white oak, and ash
- The wood is in the high teens to low 20's on the moisture meter when split down the middle.
- Some of the much larger pieces are around 25-26% in the middle.
Here goes my methodology for starting a fire from in a cold stove.
I put 3 splits N/S in the firebox. I then put a quarter of a super cedar between each split. I then put 3 splits E/W over the 3 N/S splits. I will then put some small kindling on top of that.
I light a couple of sheets of newspaper on top of the kindling to prime the chimney and then I light the super cedars. With the door cracked it takes about 5 minutes for the fire to get going. I then close the door and leave the air control open for another 10-15 minutes. Usually by this time the flue temps (Probe type) are 800ish and the stove is 400ish.
I'll gradually close it down to about 25-50% over the next minute or so depending on how lively the fire is. About ten minutes later I will adjust again....and then again as needed. The air control usually settles out between 5-15% depending on the draft. The stove will cruise around 550 and the flue will hang out around 600.
Okay.....with 6 average sized splits I'm only getting about 4-5 hours of burn time. After this time it takes significant effort to get another fire going (paper, kindling, etc). So I basically have a 4-5 hour window before my good coals are gone. I usually have an active fire for 2 hours, then a big pile of coals with lazy flames for another hour.
I keep seeing quotes on here like I put three splits on the coals before I went to bed at 10, and at 7am had plenty of coals left to throw some more wood on there! How can I get to that point? I realize that my wood is not ideal, but my technique has got to be off. Any suggestions? Not that I don't mind playing with fire but starting 2-3 fires from scratch everyday is getting tiring!
Thanks!
Just so we're on the same page...
- Englander 30
- 6ft double wall stove pipe
- 16ft double wall chimney pipe
- My wood is red oak, white oak, and ash
- The wood is in the high teens to low 20's on the moisture meter when split down the middle.
- Some of the much larger pieces are around 25-26% in the middle.
Here goes my methodology for starting a fire from in a cold stove.
I put 3 splits N/S in the firebox. I then put a quarter of a super cedar between each split. I then put 3 splits E/W over the 3 N/S splits. I will then put some small kindling on top of that.
I light a couple of sheets of newspaper on top of the kindling to prime the chimney and then I light the super cedars. With the door cracked it takes about 5 minutes for the fire to get going. I then close the door and leave the air control open for another 10-15 minutes. Usually by this time the flue temps (Probe type) are 800ish and the stove is 400ish.
I'll gradually close it down to about 25-50% over the next minute or so depending on how lively the fire is. About ten minutes later I will adjust again....and then again as needed. The air control usually settles out between 5-15% depending on the draft. The stove will cruise around 550 and the flue will hang out around 600.
Okay.....with 6 average sized splits I'm only getting about 4-5 hours of burn time. After this time it takes significant effort to get another fire going (paper, kindling, etc). So I basically have a 4-5 hour window before my good coals are gone. I usually have an active fire for 2 hours, then a big pile of coals with lazy flames for another hour.
I keep seeing quotes on here like I put three splits on the coals before I went to bed at 10, and at 7am had plenty of coals left to throw some more wood on there! How can I get to that point? I realize that my wood is not ideal, but my technique has got to be off. Any suggestions? Not that I don't mind playing with fire but starting 2-3 fires from scratch everyday is getting tiring!
Thanks!