As a new stove user one of the key tips I've picked up here at hearth.com is to burn hot, in order to minimize vapor condensation within the flue pipe and resulting creosote buildup. Jotul says to run my F400 between 400 and 600 deg external surface temp. I've done so, verifying with an IR thermometer.
But I read on woodheat.org that I should get that hot fire going, then turn down the air and allow the load to burn down to coals. The coals don't stay hot. They say to burn in cycles of heat, not to maintain a hot fire all the time.
I notice that the F400 secondaries really don't kick in at surface temps below about 550.
1) So how do I utilize the secondaries if I'm not burning hot at all times?
2) Does letting the wood load burn down to coals produce undue creosote?
My F400 has been running well. It has a straight-up flue in the center of the house, is mostly protected from the outside air, and the draft has been fine. My wood is red oak, verified at 14-16% MC. I have had no problems with difficult starts, back puffing, smouldering, etc.
But keeping the stove at 550+ overheats the room and is eating up wood, even with the air turned down to about 25-33%. I think I've been blasting away too much, in an effort to avoid the dreaded dirty flue.
But I read on woodheat.org that I should get that hot fire going, then turn down the air and allow the load to burn down to coals. The coals don't stay hot. They say to burn in cycles of heat, not to maintain a hot fire all the time.
I notice that the F400 secondaries really don't kick in at surface temps below about 550.
1) So how do I utilize the secondaries if I'm not burning hot at all times?
2) Does letting the wood load burn down to coals produce undue creosote?
My F400 has been running well. It has a straight-up flue in the center of the house, is mostly protected from the outside air, and the draft has been fine. My wood is red oak, verified at 14-16% MC. I have had no problems with difficult starts, back puffing, smouldering, etc.
But keeping the stove at 550+ overheats the room and is eating up wood, even with the air turned down to about 25-33%. I think I've been blasting away too much, in an effort to avoid the dreaded dirty flue.