Over the years I have had both a Outside air intake for the stove and used inside air. So I thought, which one is really better? Still no answer but here is some interesting data points in the attached image. The middle up and down was when I switched from outside to inside air. It overloaded the burn pot pretty quickly when I went to inside air. Restarted it and was back to burning like it should.
No changes to any settings just capped the outside air and opened the inside vent. When things warm up next weekend I plan on redoing the test to see if temps in the 20's/30's make any difference.
Does a average increase in the temp of the stove (theoretically providing more heat) trump the amount of warm air pulled from the inside and exhausted from the stove? Interested in your thoughts.
Internal Temp is taken in the combustion chamber and the Intake air is taken 4" away from the stove on the intake air pipe.
Outside air 2 F -5 F
High 368 F
Low 348 F
Inside air 69 F - 72 F
High 389 F
Low 372 F
No changes to any settings just capped the outside air and opened the inside vent. When things warm up next weekend I plan on redoing the test to see if temps in the 20's/30's make any difference.
Does a average increase in the temp of the stove (theoretically providing more heat) trump the amount of warm air pulled from the inside and exhausted from the stove? Interested in your thoughts.
Internal Temp is taken in the combustion chamber and the Intake air is taken 4" away from the stove on the intake air pipe.
Outside air 2 F -5 F
High 368 F
Low 348 F
Inside air 69 F - 72 F
High 389 F
Low 372 F