I thought I'd share this because there may be others new to stove burning and unaware of this problem, and it may be mysterious and troubling and especially likely in this warmer shoulder season.
This morning, my wife notified me that a puff of smoke came out of the stovepipe at the collar, accompanied by a "poof" sound. I was sleeping in so I didn't witness it, but thanks to this forum and it's members, I knew exactly what it was. This morning it was in the low 50's out and about 65 inside, so not much temperature difference. She had just turned the damper down and was looking at the "afterburner" (her term and I like it
) when it poofed. Of course, it was alarming to her at the time. I noticed that the glass was darkening a bit, too.
Anyway, it sounds like a classic setup for backpuffing and we talked about what causes it and how to prevent it, like not turning the damper down too soon or too fast. Lots of good threads here on backpuffing so I won't go any further, but I thought it was worth mentioning, especially in warmish weather.
This morning, my wife notified me that a puff of smoke came out of the stovepipe at the collar, accompanied by a "poof" sound. I was sleeping in so I didn't witness it, but thanks to this forum and it's members, I knew exactly what it was. This morning it was in the low 50's out and about 65 inside, so not much temperature difference. She had just turned the damper down and was looking at the "afterburner" (her term and I like it

Anyway, it sounds like a classic setup for backpuffing and we talked about what causes it and how to prevent it, like not turning the damper down too soon or too fast. Lots of good threads here on backpuffing so I won't go any further, but I thought it was worth mentioning, especially in warmish weather.