Well, I finally got a chance to play with a burn-tube style non-cat stove today.
A friend of mine bought a new house then put in a nice new PE insert. I went over today and got to see both. Obviously a house warming gift was in order so I brought some of my best oak.
At any rate, I arrived and got to see the stove - it was burning very low with some dark on the glass (bottom corners) and not the most exciting look to it. Air about 1/4 from lowest setting on the slider. There was a good sized coal bed and some mostly burned splits in there. Turned air up to full and the splits started burning... let this go while we ate.
So, finally the splits were down to coals. Stove now had a really good bed of coals - probably more than it should at reload but had to get done to get back to work so time to play. I put three decent sized pieces of my oak on there (E-W) - they barely fit so I guess 16" is about how wide that insert is (or I got wider pieces by accident?). Anyway, they caught right away and shortly after closing the door I saw a sheet of secondaries starting at the top of the stove. I started turning down the air and not long after there was a beautiful curtain of flame shooting down into the rising flames. Long story short I was able to get air down to maybe 1/8th and it still had very nice secondaries as well as some flames on the splits to boot. The heat was great - fan on full, lots of heat off the stove. Got the paint curing as well - guess we hit a new high temp. No thermometer (Should have brought one with me) so I don't know how hot we were burning.
Comment was that they were not able to turn air down that far before and still have flames - much less any secondaries (I'm not sure they had ever seen them before). She said "is it the wood that is the difference?" Mission accomplished
4 year old oak splits vs just delivered "seasoned" wood bought from local dealer - not exactly a fair comparison eh?
In any case I think that PE Summit is a nice stove - it sure was pumping out the heat when I left and although the fan was audible it was not distracting. I was disappointed though that it hadn't burned off the glass by time I left - I'm sure it was hot enough inside but it just didn't seem to be burning away very fast. I wish I could have stayed around to see how long those splits lasted and kept up the fire show. I also wonder about the temps we were running at - I'm so addicted to my thermometers after all.
A friend of mine bought a new house then put in a nice new PE insert. I went over today and got to see both. Obviously a house warming gift was in order so I brought some of my best oak.
At any rate, I arrived and got to see the stove - it was burning very low with some dark on the glass (bottom corners) and not the most exciting look to it. Air about 1/4 from lowest setting on the slider. There was a good sized coal bed and some mostly burned splits in there. Turned air up to full and the splits started burning... let this go while we ate.
So, finally the splits were down to coals. Stove now had a really good bed of coals - probably more than it should at reload but had to get done to get back to work so time to play. I put three decent sized pieces of my oak on there (E-W) - they barely fit so I guess 16" is about how wide that insert is (or I got wider pieces by accident?). Anyway, they caught right away and shortly after closing the door I saw a sheet of secondaries starting at the top of the stove. I started turning down the air and not long after there was a beautiful curtain of flame shooting down into the rising flames. Long story short I was able to get air down to maybe 1/8th and it still had very nice secondaries as well as some flames on the splits to boot. The heat was great - fan on full, lots of heat off the stove. Got the paint curing as well - guess we hit a new high temp. No thermometer (Should have brought one with me) so I don't know how hot we were burning.
Comment was that they were not able to turn air down that far before and still have flames - much less any secondaries (I'm not sure they had ever seen them before). She said "is it the wood that is the difference?" Mission accomplished

In any case I think that PE Summit is a nice stove - it sure was pumping out the heat when I left and although the fan was audible it was not distracting. I was disappointed though that it hadn't burned off the glass by time I left - I'm sure it was hot enough inside but it just didn't seem to be burning away very fast. I wish I could have stayed around to see how long those splits lasted and kept up the fire show. I also wonder about the temps we were running at - I'm so addicted to my thermometers after all.