weatherguy said:We believe that you had a beautiful fire going...but if we saw a picture then we'd really believe you :lol:
Pagey said:I was asking for pictures, albeit in a rather facetious Internet meme way.
firefighterjake said:Pagey said:I was asking for pictures, albeit in a rather facetious Internet meme way.
And here I was thinking Pook had returned . . . or at the very least Pook was being channeled through you.![]()
Actually there were two fires—one down in/on the wood and another, the one that looked like the Aurora, up at the top. Must have been 8 or 10 inches of “darkness” between the two, and, like the Aurora, it came (85%) and went (10-15%) while the lower fire was constant. I laid on my back on the floor so I could see the top fire. It was mostly blue and very gossamer in nature. Is this top fire “normal”? Did I do something wrong? The bottom fire was more yellow, but not the bright yellow like a fireplace. It was a lazy kind of see-through yellow. The temp went right on up to just over 500 and stayed there for about 2 hours. Hope I didn’t screw this up!
I’ll post photos when at home. I tried taking photos of this Aurora type fire, but it would not show on the photo.
weatherguy said:Actually there were two fires—one down in/on the wood and another, the one that looked like the Aurora, up at the top. Must have been 8 or 10 inches of “darkness” between the two, and, like the Aurora, it came (85%) and went (10-15%) while the lower fire was constant. I laid on my back on the floor so I could see the top fire. It was mostly blue and very gossamer in nature. Is this top fire “normal”? Did I do something wrong? The bottom fire was more yellow, but not the bright yellow like a fireplace. It was a lazy kind of see-through yellow. The temp went right on up to just over 500 and stayed there for about 2 hours. Hope I didn’t screw this up!
I’ll post photos when at home. I tried taking photos of this Aurora type fire, but it would not show on the photo.
Sounds like you did everyhting perfect, those are secondaries burning up top, they're beautiful, are'nt they?
Pagey said:I've found that the flash on a camera easily overpowers the more "delicate" secondary combustion flames. Try turning the flash off to see what you can capture. And I think with a cat stove, those secondaries will trend towards the "ghost" type as opposed to the oft reported "bowels of hell" type on a non-cat stove. :lol:
In any event, it sounds like you did everything right. Secondary combustion is what you're going for.
Texas boy said:Pagey said:I've found that the flash on a camera easily overpowers the more "delicate" secondary combustion flames. Try turning the flash off to see what you can capture. And I think with a cat stove, those secondaries will trend towards the "ghost" type as opposed to the oft reported "bowels of hell" type on a non-cat stove. :lol:
In any event, it sounds like you did everything right. Secondary combustion is what you're going for.
Did turn the flash off, but didn't help. It must be that certain wavelengths don't get picked up by the camera. I don't know for sure, but there must have been 20 shots taken and not one came out.
Pagey said:Texas boy said:Pagey said:I've found that the flash on a camera easily overpowers the more "delicate" secondary combustion flames. Try turning the flash off to see what you can capture. And I think with a cat stove, those secondaries will trend towards the "ghost" type as opposed to the oft reported "bowels of hell" type on a non-cat stove. :lol:
In any event, it sounds like you did everything right. Secondary combustion is what you're going for.
Did turn the flash off, but didn't help. It must be that certain wavelengths don't get picked up by the camera. I don't know for sure, but there must have been 20 shots taken and not one came out.
Well, at the very least you tried. Sounds like another quality Woodstock product out in the field! Enjoy that stove. They're works of art.
Todd said:Shame on you Tex! I'll come down there and give you 10 lashings if you cracked any of those stones on your 1st burn! >:-( Let that sucker cool off completely before you burn it again. Did you see it sweat any moisture at all? Well at least you know your wood is going to work out just fine.
carinya said:You sure that wasn't the Aurora Australis that you saw ?
especially if you had to get Down Under to see it :lol:
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