My avatar picture of the family dog peacefully sleeping near the stove was accurate until exactly two nights ago. That night I loaded the stove at 9:00 pm, damped it way down and went to bed. Two hours later, my wife was shaking me awake telling me the stove was "exploding". The alleged Labrador Retriever "watch dog" reacted to some bigger than usual backpuffs that caused the stone top to "pop" and rattle, and the dog then launched herself over a 4 foot high safety gate which separated a still-chewing young dog from the rest of the house. She has refused to go back in that room ever since.
It never back-puffed that badly before, and has run for two days since then perfectly. It was just one of those times a little more air at the right time would have prevented the backpuffing.
Has anybody else had a dog or cat terrorized by their stove??
I guess I will have to change my avatar now...
It never back-puffed that badly before, and has run for two days since then perfectly. It was just one of those times a little more air at the right time would have prevented the backpuffing.
Has anybody else had a dog or cat terrorized by their stove??
I guess I will have to change my avatar now...

I think I'm coming to the conclusion that it is just too easy to shut the air all the way down and walk away when that isn't the right thing to do in all cases. Last night I had some little ones that were very odd - I had some floating secondaries on top of the stove then every once in a while it seemed that there was a puff in the ash pan or somewhere down in the bottom of the pile - this would cause the secondaries to go out (like blowing out a candle) for a few seconds then they would re-light and a minute or so later it would repeat. Nothing big enough to get smoke smells in the house or to rattle (or even hear really), but it sure looked odd - the puff blowing out secondaries and tossing burning embers about inside the stove.