I am first time wood stove insert owner / burner and I just got my Napoleon EPI3 installed last week (interior chimney). My chimney had a clay liner (fair shape), and I ran a SS liner down it, it was a tight fit, but it worked.
The temperature has been a bit odd for this time of year, but I couldn't wait any longer to try the stove out. It was in the high 50's yesterday when I did my first burn. The manual mentioned that it would be difficult to get a fire going, due to the moisture in the firebrick.
I put some paper that I crushed into a ball in the middle of the stove, and put some fireside kindling wood all around it. I left the door open slightly until all the paper burned up (it started to smoke a bit, so I shut the door), and then once the kindling wood was going decent, I place two cedar logs that I cut earlier this year (pretty dry wood).
It took a while for the blowers to kick on, but once they did it was a very good heat source
, I was very happy.
I decided to go on the roof, and check the liner, and see what it looked like the next day (today). It was brownish gold on the inside as far as I could see (sticky feeling), and the top of the chimney cap was the same way. I wasn't for sure how normal this was? I assume that brown sticky feeling is creosote? I always thought creosote was black / tarish looking.
The temperature has been a bit odd for this time of year, but I couldn't wait any longer to try the stove out. It was in the high 50's yesterday when I did my first burn. The manual mentioned that it would be difficult to get a fire going, due to the moisture in the firebrick.
I put some paper that I crushed into a ball in the middle of the stove, and put some fireside kindling wood all around it. I left the door open slightly until all the paper burned up (it started to smoke a bit, so I shut the door), and then once the kindling wood was going decent, I place two cedar logs that I cut earlier this year (pretty dry wood).
It took a while for the blowers to kick on, but once they did it was a very good heat source
, I was very happy.I decided to go on the roof, and check the liner, and see what it looked like the next day (today). It was brownish gold on the inside as far as I could see (sticky feeling), and the top of the chimney cap was the same way. I wasn't for sure how normal this was? I assume that brown sticky feeling is creosote? I always thought creosote was black / tarish looking.