All,
I have had my stove for a little over a week. (Lopi 1750i) I am happy as I have not turned the heat on since I first started my stove. I wanted to check with you all to see if I am utilizing my stove to its best ability and if I need to correct any actions I am taking.
Here we go......
-Hot coals are raked to the front of the stove.
-If I am home I burn not premo wood. Shorter burn times, but that is OK... after all I get to tinker with my stove and fire.
-Wood.... Sycamore, black locust, oak, cherry, and some misc wood. The wood is below 20% but some black locust is around 22-23% and is only added when a hot coal base is presant. I tend to also put a piece of doug fir in with the black locust to give it a kick start. (one...not many doug fir pieces. I am careful not to over-fire the stove)
-Loading...If the temp is up outside grater than 40 deg. I tend to make small fires. Less than 30 I will bump up the volume of wood to produce more heat.
-After loading I crack the door, open the damper (not the bypass) and let the stove worm up to 350-400 before starting to choke back the air. If the fire does not light the secondary's I kick it up again to get that temp up some more.
-Burn time vary with the kind of wood I use. Night time is a load of hardwoods..Locust...Maple...Ash...etc. I tend to utilize rounds as they burn longer and fill in the gaps with splits. I have been getting burn times of 6hrs-7hrs. The stove runs at 350-400, but more toward the 350 side. It heats my 1700 ft home like a champ at 350-400 at 30 deg.
Questions I have:
When I prep for overnight burns or long daytime burns I make sure the wood is charred and the secondaries are firing. The front of the stove reaches 400 and I choke it down. I then look at the way the fire is acting for 5 min's. When I come downstairs some times I don't see the secondaries burning, but a real hot fire with major coals. Is this a problem?
Loading the stove....I am loading for a long burn N/S as much as I can. I am not getting the burn times of 8hrs or better...are my expectations high? If not, what suggestions can you give me to experiment and try. I know a great deal of this is trial and error for a new-B, but since I have joined this forum I have gained some major knowledge thanks to you guys/girls.
Wet wood...I try to use wood that is 20% or less. I did manage to pick up a great deal of black locust that has a moisture reading of 18-24%. Some folks have said that if my fire box is hot enough, burning the wood that is 23-24% should not be an issue. I am concerned as I don't want to create excessive creosote. Will I do so by burning the black locust higher than 20% but not exceeding 24%? I understand that I am not going to get the BTU's as if the wood was under 20%, but it still burns long and throws major heat.
What would be the max MC you would burn on a constant basis? (this is a loaded question..sorry folks but I had to ask)
Sweeping the SS liner. How often should this be done burning 24/7?
Stove pipe thermometer....is it worth the investment. I just have one magnetic therm on the front of the stove.
OK...so I wrote a book...sorry for the long winded post, but needed to ask the, "Seasoned Pro's" (ha..I like that) if I am heading in the right direction.
Thanks all!
Mike
I have had my stove for a little over a week. (Lopi 1750i) I am happy as I have not turned the heat on since I first started my stove. I wanted to check with you all to see if I am utilizing my stove to its best ability and if I need to correct any actions I am taking.
Here we go......
-Hot coals are raked to the front of the stove.
-If I am home I burn not premo wood. Shorter burn times, but that is OK... after all I get to tinker with my stove and fire.

-Wood.... Sycamore, black locust, oak, cherry, and some misc wood. The wood is below 20% but some black locust is around 22-23% and is only added when a hot coal base is presant. I tend to also put a piece of doug fir in with the black locust to give it a kick start. (one...not many doug fir pieces. I am careful not to over-fire the stove)
-Loading...If the temp is up outside grater than 40 deg. I tend to make small fires. Less than 30 I will bump up the volume of wood to produce more heat.
-After loading I crack the door, open the damper (not the bypass) and let the stove worm up to 350-400 before starting to choke back the air. If the fire does not light the secondary's I kick it up again to get that temp up some more.
-Burn time vary with the kind of wood I use. Night time is a load of hardwoods..Locust...Maple...Ash...etc. I tend to utilize rounds as they burn longer and fill in the gaps with splits. I have been getting burn times of 6hrs-7hrs. The stove runs at 350-400, but more toward the 350 side. It heats my 1700 ft home like a champ at 350-400 at 30 deg.
Questions I have:
When I prep for overnight burns or long daytime burns I make sure the wood is charred and the secondaries are firing. The front of the stove reaches 400 and I choke it down. I then look at the way the fire is acting for 5 min's. When I come downstairs some times I don't see the secondaries burning, but a real hot fire with major coals. Is this a problem?
Loading the stove....I am loading for a long burn N/S as much as I can. I am not getting the burn times of 8hrs or better...are my expectations high? If not, what suggestions can you give me to experiment and try. I know a great deal of this is trial and error for a new-B, but since I have joined this forum I have gained some major knowledge thanks to you guys/girls.
Wet wood...I try to use wood that is 20% or less. I did manage to pick up a great deal of black locust that has a moisture reading of 18-24%. Some folks have said that if my fire box is hot enough, burning the wood that is 23-24% should not be an issue. I am concerned as I don't want to create excessive creosote. Will I do so by burning the black locust higher than 20% but not exceeding 24%? I understand that I am not going to get the BTU's as if the wood was under 20%, but it still burns long and throws major heat.
What would be the max MC you would burn on a constant basis? (this is a loaded question..sorry folks but I had to ask)
Sweeping the SS liner. How often should this be done burning 24/7?
Stove pipe thermometer....is it worth the investment. I just have one magnetic therm on the front of the stove.
OK...so I wrote a book...sorry for the long winded post, but needed to ask the, "Seasoned Pro's" (ha..I like that) if I am heading in the right direction.
Thanks all!
Mike