Hi All-
First time poster here, but have frequently read and appreciate the woodstove wisdom. I have a Vermont Castings Encore 1450 NC in my tenant's house, and was recently alerted to a severe problem. Evidently the flue collar has melted...and not just a little bit! There is something like a 3 inch gap between the damper housing (where is sagged) and the damper. See attached picture. They tell me that the damper gasket had fallen out, so it was hard to control the fire. I guess it just raged hot, and fired right out through the flue?
I find this alarming in several respects: Need to control the fire better, and not let it run hot (there was a stovetop thermometer, so should have made the problem clear). Obviously we need the damper gasket replaced and all other gaskets checked.
Is the stove reparable? Is it sufficient to replace the damper housing which has the obvious damage, or should I be concerned about overfiring damage to other parts of the stove? The damper *appears* okay, but that is one of the most obvious adjacent parts that could have been damaged.
Thoughts and advice much appreciated. Thanks!
(Picture is looking down through the open griddle at the damper housing and "closed" damper on the back, top of the stove.)
First time poster here, but have frequently read and appreciate the woodstove wisdom. I have a Vermont Castings Encore 1450 NC in my tenant's house, and was recently alerted to a severe problem. Evidently the flue collar has melted...and not just a little bit! There is something like a 3 inch gap between the damper housing (where is sagged) and the damper. See attached picture. They tell me that the damper gasket had fallen out, so it was hard to control the fire. I guess it just raged hot, and fired right out through the flue?
I find this alarming in several respects: Need to control the fire better, and not let it run hot (there was a stovetop thermometer, so should have made the problem clear). Obviously we need the damper gasket replaced and all other gaskets checked.
Is the stove reparable? Is it sufficient to replace the damper housing which has the obvious damage, or should I be concerned about overfiring damage to other parts of the stove? The damper *appears* okay, but that is one of the most obvious adjacent parts that could have been damaged.
Thoughts and advice much appreciated. Thanks!
(Picture is looking down through the open griddle at the damper housing and "closed" damper on the back, top of the stove.)