Hi all,
I just wanted to check to see if this is a common experience among owners of inserts OR, more specifically, Lopi insert owners.
I've noticed and really now confirmed a phenomena I've been observing: my fan usually doesn't turn on till the stove hits at least 400 (or, more accurately, it's over 300 for about 5-10 minutes). Which is fine, takes about 10-20 minutes for the fan to kick on and at that point I'm usually around 400-450 degrees.
What I've noticed is that if the fan kicks on and I've got it set on medium or higher fan speed, the temperatures basically stop rising. I might be able to eek out 475 or 500, but it'll never rise higher than that. Last night I had a hardcore coal bed going, two engulfed pieces of semi-seasoned ash, and I put a really nice pine log on top when the temp was 475. Woosh! My firebox was filled with flames and secondaries which continued for a solid 15 minutes straight. Fan on like 6/10. Temp never rose above 500 (and I actually think my rutland stove top thermometer reads high).
So I decided to experiment: without changing any stove settings, I reduced the fan to its lowest setting. Slowly, over the next 30 minutes or so, the stove rose to about 650-700.
Is this normal or simply a byproduct of a hard-core Lopi blower?
Since the insert puts out only minimal heat without the blower, i feel like I should use it ASAP and continuously at a good setting.
Should I instead leave it on low and let the stove get up to 650 or so before cranking the blower? If so, then I can sustain a much higher level of heat output but I let more heat go before I start using it...
Thanks all,
Joe
I just wanted to check to see if this is a common experience among owners of inserts OR, more specifically, Lopi insert owners.
I've noticed and really now confirmed a phenomena I've been observing: my fan usually doesn't turn on till the stove hits at least 400 (or, more accurately, it's over 300 for about 5-10 minutes). Which is fine, takes about 10-20 minutes for the fan to kick on and at that point I'm usually around 400-450 degrees.
What I've noticed is that if the fan kicks on and I've got it set on medium or higher fan speed, the temperatures basically stop rising. I might be able to eek out 475 or 500, but it'll never rise higher than that. Last night I had a hardcore coal bed going, two engulfed pieces of semi-seasoned ash, and I put a really nice pine log on top when the temp was 475. Woosh! My firebox was filled with flames and secondaries which continued for a solid 15 minutes straight. Fan on like 6/10. Temp never rose above 500 (and I actually think my rutland stove top thermometer reads high).
So I decided to experiment: without changing any stove settings, I reduced the fan to its lowest setting. Slowly, over the next 30 minutes or so, the stove rose to about 650-700.
Is this normal or simply a byproduct of a hard-core Lopi blower?
Since the insert puts out only minimal heat without the blower, i feel like I should use it ASAP and continuously at a good setting.
Should I instead leave it on low and let the stove get up to 650 or so before cranking the blower? If so, then I can sustain a much higher level of heat output but I let more heat go before I start using it...
Thanks all,
Joe