Yessss indeeed
Options is a nice thing.
Our Quad is the old 1000 series, that was built in 1993.
Its either on, nuts to the bar. or off.
For several years, we heated with the Quad as a the primary source and used an Earthstove WP50 during really cold weather.
The WP 50 ran on the shells just fine, sadly even on low it would run us out if the weather was above 40F outside.
A good portion of our winter weather is mid 40's and wet, so the Old WP did not getused that much.
It was in the winter of 09/10 that I decided to make the serious changes and install some different stoves.
Having the access to the Shells CHEAP made the decsision an easy one.
The first change was to add the tiny little Whitfield.
This really shines during the times when we need a small fire to keep the chill off.
Weather in the 50F range still requires heat and the little critter is perfect.
The same winter that I installed the little whit was cold and Pellet prices were high and hard to get locally.
After having just a short time with the little whit, it became obvious that this design of stove was far and away better than the old Earth stove WP-50
The WP would take at least 30 minutes minimum to get a fire going and be sure that it was going to stay going, as its startup timer was not always long enough to ensure that the low temp snap switch would engage.
So I would have to hang around the stove and make sure that the fire was indeed going to stay burning.
I started watching Craigs List and found the Large Whit for sale very cheap (Dirty stove syndrome, would not run)
I removed the WP and built our current raised hearth and installed the large whit.
2 minutes MAX and I have a fire up and running and can walk away from the stove and not worry about it. (manual start)
I never burn either of the Whits above the 1 setting except maybe during a cold start right after a complete cleaning.
The large whit will draft so well, that on 1 the fire will almost die out between auger cycles, until the grate gets some coals built up. (30 minutes)
Its not a biggy though, the fire will just smoke some before it catches again during that first 30 minutes or so if I run it on 1.
Once the grate has coals, it works sweet.
All this stuff is just part and parcel with burning shells. The auger cycle time is a 7 seconds off time on 1 and 5 on 2
6 seconds would be perfect.
I may add a variable Pot to my new controller system so I can tweek it better.
I copied the original Whitfield time arrangement of 7-5-4-3-2 and thought better of it afterwards.
Anymore, the Quad sits quietly, waiting for its next assignment.
We used it a couple weeks ago when the power was out nearly all day. Once power came back I lit both Whits, then fired off the quad and let it bring the house temps up fast.
As soon as the temp was up, I turned the stat down on the Quad and let it go back to sleep.
I just wish we had gone to the multiple stove mode a long time ago.
Having a large Ranch style house thats spread out with no hallways make heatng a real easy job as the cooler air easily flows to the stove.
Both the Whits are diagonally opposed at opposite wnds of the house, which makes airflow work well too.
I am sure that for many folks, all the fiddling, fooling and messing around would be just too much.
Every night its down to the basement, to screen out a couple buckets of shells and then pack them up to the stoves.
If we have to leave for an overnighter, we just flip the stat up on the Quad and cram the hopper full, stuff the whit clear full and let it run until it goes out, then the quad will take over until we get home.
One thing I wish I had wired into the whit was a momentary button to power the auger full on to reprime it after a complete run it dry session.
Ah well, woulda, shoulda, coulda.
Snowy