Todd said:
Sounds like your stove is working perfectly to me. A 400-600 external pipe temp is way to high and would be wasting all your heat up the stack. When you shut the damper the temp should drop and run lower than the stove top. Maybe your local stove guy was confused with external/internal pipe temps. Internal temps run approx double the external temps.
H-mmm...
The main thing is that I don't want to build up creosote. I was getting tinkling sounds coming from the flue pipe right after I shut it down from a hot burn. Sounded like burning creosote to me. The guy I mentioned said the Vig was always a big creosote maker and needed to be run quite hot to avoid it. He said it was a high volume/low velocity stove when run with the damper shut due to the very long horizontal flame path slowing all the air down. Made sense to me the way he described it.
I've always burnt off creosote in the past, but I don't know how much (if any) is accumulating farther up the stack since I just started using this particular stove this season. After my first cleaning, the sweep can let me know how much (if any) creosote he found, and where in the stack he found it. The guy I mentioned was very clear on specifying it was 400-600º on the outside of the pipe. He said an internal probe type might be better (I guess it's like twice as high), but that as long as I was using single wall pipe the magnetic external thermometer was "close enough".
I'm also a little concerned that the stove ran all day at 350º flue temp and 700º stove top temp - 100º higher than I'm supposed to be running it. The thermostat had the primary air flap shut all the way once the stove was cranking, so the only way to shut it down further would be to close down the secondary air. Not sure if that's an option... still learning this stove. I don't mind running it at 700º some of the time, but I don't want that to be the "normal" running temp.
I used a key-type damper with the old stove, a Jotul 118 clone. That one had a 5" flue opening that I used an adapter on to bring it to 6", and then again up an inch at the 7" thimble. The damper was in the vertical section just ahead of the the first elbow. When you closed that damper, you could just feel the stove heat up. I suspect the same would happen with this stove as the heat would be more contained. But maybe it would then drop back down again once it stabilized.
Does that sound right or am I way off base?
BTW, heating the chimney isn't such a bad thing for me. It's pretty massive (two separate flues side by side) and once it gets warm, it radiates heat long into the next day. All three of my floors (basement and two uppers) are right about 72ºF - just perfect for the ever chilly lady of the house.
BK