Wood Stove Problems?
The fine folks over at Alternative Energy Retailer posted the other day a great article about problems with wood stoves and common mistakes that may lead to these problems not being the fault of the unit. In the article “Problems With The Wood Stove? Maybe It’s Not The Stove” it is suggested that many people may be misinformed about things related to their stove which can and will cause performance issues.
The single-wall pipe has a male end and a female end. It is always installed with the male end pointing down toward the stove. Many people say, “Oh, that male end needs to be pointed up – otherwise, all of the smoke is going to come out through the joints.”
But people do not understand the reason that the male end is pointed down is not for the smoke to come out: It is to allow the creosote to run back into the stove from inside of the chimney
The author, Wayne Dooley, continues to explain one of the better starting procedures for your wood stove and that creating a draft and selecting well seasoned wood over damp wood are one of the key ways to reduce smoke upon startup.
A lot of people will put a little bit of newspaper inside of their stove, light it and close the door, because they don’t want smoke to come in their house. When they close that door, they burn up all of the oxygen inside of the firebox, and now it creates smoke. And because there’s no draft to actually pull it out, it comes out wherever there’s an opening.
You need to tell them to make sure the air control is open wide and the door is cocked open. You want that fire to be fed with enough air so it will get the heat to go up the chimney, and you need to have enough heat to push that column of cold air up and out of the chimney to establish a draft. Typically, a person would only need to leave the door open two to five minutes, at most, to create a draft.
The article goes into much more detail about common problems associated with wood stoves due to misinformation given. Give it good read, you just might learn something new, I know I did.
Posted: July 31st, 2008 under Home Heating, Questions & Answers.
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A news article from the New Hampshire Sunday News called “
The scale of the
It almost seems as if each day the price of just about everything in the world increases. One those price increases includes the cost of home heating. There are many families who continue to live with the cost of high heating; however, others refuse to. Refusing to pay a large amount of money to heat your home does not mean that you have to go without heat, but it does mean that you will have to find alternative heating methods.
After several months of waiting, the