I've been burning my Regency EX90 ZC unit (R90/FP90) since November. 18' of 8" Duraplus and seasoned wood that I split, stacked and covered two years ago.
Last night I got her hotter than I ever have before and it was a little scary.
I followed all of the wonderful advice that I've learned on hearth.com and I believe I did everything right to build a clean, hot and efficient fire. It was just a little too hot for my liking. I'd like to learn what I could do differently next time. Ideally I don't need it as hot and I'd like the burn cycle time to be as long as possible.
In an effort to get a nice long burn I loaded the stove with 3 large splits. I'd say it was 3/4 full. I loaded onto a nice coal bed, not too big, not too small. The load ignited immediately on wide open primary air. I let it burn wide open for about 15 minutes. Then I began to turn the air down slowly. 3/4 open, wait 5 minutes. 1/2 open, wait five minutes. 1/4 open, wait five minutes, and finally all the way closed (unsure if all the way closed on the rod is actually 100% closed or not).
Well the show that I had was unreal. The secondaries looked like a blazing inferno and the stove was throwing off some serious heat. I could feel the heat through the glass at about 10 feet away. I pointed my IR gun at the door and saw 650. I pointed it through the warm air vent and saw 650 on the actual steel stove top.
I was holding up OK until I heard what I believe was the outer sheet metal case of the ZC box oil can and make a noise that basically made me sh*t my pants. I proceeded to babysit the stove until the coaling stage.
The next day I did an inspection ( I have site access to the top of the unit, the collar and the pipe) and everything looked fine. I believe everything is fine. I had done an inspection of the inside of the flue about 2 weeks ago and there was minimal to zero creosote buildup.
So my question is:
How can I keep this from happening again? Ideally, I like when the door is at 500, not 600. I'd like to load a full load for long burn times, but I don't need this crazy fire. I'm guessing that I could turn down the air sooner and load on a smaller bed of coals?
Any advice would be greatly appreciated. I want to enjoy this thing and not have to stress about it. It is a serious heater and we've come to love that aspect of it this winter.
Thanks!
Last night I got her hotter than I ever have before and it was a little scary.
I followed all of the wonderful advice that I've learned on hearth.com and I believe I did everything right to build a clean, hot and efficient fire. It was just a little too hot for my liking. I'd like to learn what I could do differently next time. Ideally I don't need it as hot and I'd like the burn cycle time to be as long as possible.
In an effort to get a nice long burn I loaded the stove with 3 large splits. I'd say it was 3/4 full. I loaded onto a nice coal bed, not too big, not too small. The load ignited immediately on wide open primary air. I let it burn wide open for about 15 minutes. Then I began to turn the air down slowly. 3/4 open, wait 5 minutes. 1/2 open, wait five minutes. 1/4 open, wait five minutes, and finally all the way closed (unsure if all the way closed on the rod is actually 100% closed or not).
Well the show that I had was unreal. The secondaries looked like a blazing inferno and the stove was throwing off some serious heat. I could feel the heat through the glass at about 10 feet away. I pointed my IR gun at the door and saw 650. I pointed it through the warm air vent and saw 650 on the actual steel stove top.
I was holding up OK until I heard what I believe was the outer sheet metal case of the ZC box oil can and make a noise that basically made me sh*t my pants. I proceeded to babysit the stove until the coaling stage.
The next day I did an inspection ( I have site access to the top of the unit, the collar and the pipe) and everything looked fine. I believe everything is fine. I had done an inspection of the inside of the flue about 2 weeks ago and there was minimal to zero creosote buildup.
So my question is:
How can I keep this from happening again? Ideally, I like when the door is at 500, not 600. I'd like to load a full load for long burn times, but I don't need this crazy fire. I'm guessing that I could turn down the air sooner and load on a smaller bed of coals?
Any advice would be greatly appreciated. I want to enjoy this thing and not have to stress about it. It is a serious heater and we've come to love that aspect of it this winter.
Thanks!