Our home is nearly 18 yrs. old. We had trouble with backpuffing when we first installed the Fireview in 1991. Solved it by cracking the slider on calm, overcast, "still" days. I'm now facing the same problem in my studio over the garage. Need help/thoughts on how to increase air circulation. Cracking a door/window is no big deal in our home, but I would like a more refined solution in my workroom. I don't work out there every day and wonder if there is some sort of automatic vent that will work "automatically" to equalize pressure within the building?
The studio has forced hot air heat (no water in the building), intended to maintain the temperature at 45-50 degrees and/or "take the chill off", fully programmable thermostat. Very tight construction (2007). The Woodstock "Classic" stove will occasionally backpuff (sets off smoke detector) unless a window is cracked and is left open for the duration of the burn. I can't have backpuffing since I work with fabric and can't have the smell of woodsmoke on my clients' fabrics!
Need thoughts/ideas on bringing in more oxygen for the stove/regulating the pressure within the building and how to do it while at the same time minimizing drafts amd heat loss overnight. The hearth is on the north side of the building and is raised and tiled. Cracking windows works slick but I'd rather not leave them open all night long.
The studio has forced hot air heat (no water in the building), intended to maintain the temperature at 45-50 degrees and/or "take the chill off", fully programmable thermostat. Very tight construction (2007). The Woodstock "Classic" stove will occasionally backpuff (sets off smoke detector) unless a window is cracked and is left open for the duration of the burn. I can't have backpuffing since I work with fabric and can't have the smell of woodsmoke on my clients' fabrics!
Need thoughts/ideas on bringing in more oxygen for the stove/regulating the pressure within the building and how to do it while at the same time minimizing drafts amd heat loss overnight. The hearth is on the north side of the building and is raised and tiled. Cracking windows works slick but I'd rather not leave them open all night long.
I HAVE to have it pretty much all together and a thorough working knowledge of what has to happen and how it has to happen or it won't happen at all and I'll spend the rest of the winter opening and closing the window and making the present situation "work". I want to solve this problem one time and solve it effectively.
So, what you're saying, LL, is that there is so much air escaping around the ceiling mounted lighting fixtures that the stove is being deprived of the oxygen it requires to maintain a fire and vent the exhaust properly. Do I have it right?