thank you for this. I'll be reading the manual shortly you attached.You can leave it low for the majority of the time.
But there are caveats.
All that can be found in the manual which can be found here:
The bottomline is that it's necessary to run the stove high for a bit (up to half an hour) until the wood is all charred. Then one dials the (thermostatically controlled) air down. But one should do that in steps.
You do have to figure out what the lowest setting is that the stove can still sustain a burn in your system (house, chimney). One can set it too low, meaning not enough air comes in to sustain the production of smoke/gases for the cat toburn, leading to the cat to fall below its active temperature.
Also, if you dial the air down too fast, one can choke a cat.
It'll be a bit of a learning curve - more than "throw wood, dial down, walk away". But once you have a feel for the stove, it's fantastic.
I do know it took me a little bit to get our Jotul dialed in (how we liked to use it).
So I can accept no matter which stove we select, there will be a learning curve for sure.
thakn you