Recently installed our used Vermont Castings Encore 2550 in our yurt. Had the second burn last night. All seems to be going well in that I'm getting long burns and the cat is activating for nice clean burns--I'm just not getting as much as heat I would have expected. With the griddle temp at 550, I engage the cat, but even with the primary air open all the way, I can't get it to go over 600--which I guess isn't a bad thing as I don't want to over-fire (and I guess a little ironic in that there are others who can't keep the Encore from getting too hot!!)
Overnight temps have been in the low 30's, but I'm only maintaining inside temps of 72-75 or so whereas our older steel stove would get up to 80+ with no problem--even fully damped down.
I'm burning very well seasoned (2-3 years) oak and madrone, so that shouldn't be the problem. With our older steel "smoke dragon" I would usually burn the oak at night because the madrone just put off too much heat--the yurt would quickly get up to 80 or so inside and stay that way for many hours. I guess I'm just surprised that the older non-epa steel stove put out so much more heat than the Encore does......
Current stack set up is 3' of 8" single wall, into a 90, into a 3' SS Selco double wall piece that goes through the yurt wall, into a T, and then 8' of 8" single wall with a china hat on top. I realize I may need to increase draft, as I should be able to get this stove up to 700 or so wide open, and right now I can't. I'll add another 2-4 feet to our stack today and see if that helps, but if I'm getting a 550 degree griddle temp (recommended in the owner's manual and by others here) and I'm using good, dry/seasoned wood and but it's just not heating up the yurt that well, what could be the problem? Is this just as hot as this stove will run?? I was initially afraid that this stove might put out too much heat and cook us out (rated for 1900 sq ft), now I'm worried that when the temps drop into the teens that we might not have enough heat.........
Many thanks for any suggestions!
NP
Overnight temps have been in the low 30's, but I'm only maintaining inside temps of 72-75 or so whereas our older steel stove would get up to 80+ with no problem--even fully damped down.
I'm burning very well seasoned (2-3 years) oak and madrone, so that shouldn't be the problem. With our older steel "smoke dragon" I would usually burn the oak at night because the madrone just put off too much heat--the yurt would quickly get up to 80 or so inside and stay that way for many hours. I guess I'm just surprised that the older non-epa steel stove put out so much more heat than the Encore does......
Current stack set up is 3' of 8" single wall, into a 90, into a 3' SS Selco double wall piece that goes through the yurt wall, into a T, and then 8' of 8" single wall with a china hat on top. I realize I may need to increase draft, as I should be able to get this stove up to 700 or so wide open, and right now I can't. I'll add another 2-4 feet to our stack today and see if that helps, but if I'm getting a 550 degree griddle temp (recommended in the owner's manual and by others here) and I'm using good, dry/seasoned wood and but it's just not heating up the yurt that well, what could be the problem? Is this just as hot as this stove will run?? I was initially afraid that this stove might put out too much heat and cook us out (rated for 1900 sq ft), now I'm worried that when the temps drop into the teens that we might not have enough heat.........
Many thanks for any suggestions!
NP