You forgot duct tape !Now, now Scott with a little patience, a bit of bubble gum, bailing wire, and a small piece of tin foil one can get just about any stove to burn right even the ones you don't love.

You forgot duct tape !Now, now Scott with a little patience, a bit of bubble gum, bailing wire, and a small piece of tin foil one can get just about any stove to burn right even the ones you don't love.
You forgot duct tape !![]()
What! No WD-40!!??Bubble gum with a tin foil covering = redneck duct tape, Bubble gum = redneck sealant, Tin foil rolled into a cylinder = redneck venting.
Rednecks don't need all that fancy stuff.
Yap, dn't need notin fancy ta keep da outhouse warmBubble gum with a tin foil covering = redneck duct tape, Bubble gum = redneck sealant, Tin foil rolled into a cylinder = redneck venting.
Rednecks don't need all that fancy stuff.
What! No WD-40!!??
And, if possible, terminate the same distance from the building. Pressure from wind rises rapidly as the wind hits an obstruction.OAK and Exhaust should be on the same wall.
So.. its acting up again. If I turn it way down, scoop out the excess pellets, and let it clean out at a low setting, it'll be good to go again.
I've even left the draft wide open (knob pulled all the way out) and it will still happen.
I'm pretty sure the ash holes are getting plugged and they can't clean out fast enough.. maybe a fuel issue? I don't know. Should I drill them out another size bigger?
Long story short... the problem isn't fixed, it will just burn better below 10 degrees, then do poorly and pile up below 0... so the problem range has moved down about 10 degrees.
Any thoughts?
There was a factory notice of changing-increasing hole sizes.
We did a deep clean on Friday evening, because I knew the cold was coming.
I pull out both slides under the firebox, pull up the two blocker plates vertically and set them outside the stove.
Remove the stirrer, firepot, and brick board.
Next, I remove the 2 circular plugs behind the brick board.
I thoroughly tap on everything and scoot as much ash to the ash pan as possible with the tool and then with my fingers.
After that I take a 6 gauge copper wire (coated) and snake it up through the two holes behind the brickboard, both up and down, on both sides, banging it around.
Then, I dump the ash pan and start in with a vacuum to get any nooks and crannies with the needle nose attachment. Once the big stuff is out, I hook a hose to the end of the vacuum and shove that through as many places as it will go to get to the nooks and crannies.
After that, I reinstall everything and light it back up.
Every second deep cleaning I also clean the 4 inch chimney.
Which location, the one behind the brickboard?
Wasn't that for the baby magnum?It is at the top of the stove IIRC Don had a video of how he was cleaning that area.
''There is a fresh air inlet pulling air from outside, and the damper works off the furnace blower..'' '' I cannot burn the stove at 3 or higher when the temperature is below 10 degrees''
These two statements from the initial post make no sense to me. We have the OAK somehow being controlled by the furnace blower???? WHAT??
The second statement just goes against my common sense (debatable as far as my wife goes). Saying that the outside temperature somehow controls the stove's burn quality INSIDE the house makes no sense UNLESS that OUTSIDE temperature is controlling the incoming air volume. That leads back to this mystery damper. Is it somehow being closed and choking off the supply of incoming air? OR is there a fine mesh screen on the inlet of the OAK that is getting coated with ice as the temperature drops?
The stove, sitting in the house, shouldn't give a crap what temperature is outside! From the very beginning, this thread was missing one thing - LOGIC.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.