Hello all,
With my wood stove install complete and now a week of burning, I'm still left with a few questions on stove operation and whether the activation of the secondaries are really necessary for heating needs.
First off, yes I have seasoned wood, measuring at 10% MC with a meter I bought. Second, I know the secondaries help with the cleanliness of the burn and the general rule of thumb is to get the damper set so little to no smoke is coming from the chimney. Lastly, for reference all the wood I have is 4" diameter splits or so from my old fireplace with only a handful of larger splits.
So from here after watching multiple youtube videos and reading practically every FAQ thread, I'm still looking to understand the balance between where is the best point to burn for heat and longevity vs the most efficient burn with activating the secondaries. For reference, efficiency as I am referencing it is getting the most energy from the wood itself, so a complete as possible burn, instead of how long the wood will last. With that said, is the point where the secondaries are activating actually putting out the most heat? For me, that has resulted so far in 4 days of continuous burning in using a large amount of wood. When I go to the other side of things and don't worry about having a bit of smoke out of the chimney and keeping the damper closed further to have a slower burn, heat output still seems decent as well.
What am I missing so far about this or doing incorrectly? It is already a goal of mine to make larger splits for my upcoming wood stock that I will be generating in the next couple weekends. For reference, I am running a Buck Model 74 in my ZC box/chase with 24-ish feet of 6" class A and do not have any draft problems.
Thanks for your help/suggestions.
With my wood stove install complete and now a week of burning, I'm still left with a few questions on stove operation and whether the activation of the secondaries are really necessary for heating needs.
First off, yes I have seasoned wood, measuring at 10% MC with a meter I bought. Second, I know the secondaries help with the cleanliness of the burn and the general rule of thumb is to get the damper set so little to no smoke is coming from the chimney. Lastly, for reference all the wood I have is 4" diameter splits or so from my old fireplace with only a handful of larger splits.
So from here after watching multiple youtube videos and reading practically every FAQ thread, I'm still looking to understand the balance between where is the best point to burn for heat and longevity vs the most efficient burn with activating the secondaries. For reference, efficiency as I am referencing it is getting the most energy from the wood itself, so a complete as possible burn, instead of how long the wood will last. With that said, is the point where the secondaries are activating actually putting out the most heat? For me, that has resulted so far in 4 days of continuous burning in using a large amount of wood. When I go to the other side of things and don't worry about having a bit of smoke out of the chimney and keeping the damper closed further to have a slower burn, heat output still seems decent as well.
What am I missing so far about this or doing incorrectly? It is already a goal of mine to make larger splits for my upcoming wood stock that I will be generating in the next couple weekends. For reference, I am running a Buck Model 74 in my ZC box/chase with 24-ish feet of 6" class A and do not have any draft problems.
Thanks for your help/suggestions.