Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: bobcat on November 18, 2015, 12:53:51 PMIsn't the cap at least good for keeping rain/snow out when the stove isn't in use?It can be but they clog with creasote very quickly.
Isn't the cap at least good for keeping rain/snow out when the stove isn't in use?
Looks like your air intake on the door is wide open yet something is blocking the top 3/4. You said when you opened the door the fire burned great. Intake air flow is your issue, not the exhaust. I know a lot of stoves have a guard on the inside of the door to block Ashe and wood from coming out the intake holes, maybe yours got bent in closing of the intake even though the damper was wide open.
If you can manage the extra weight, Duraflame fire logs are awesome in stoves when hunting. No worries about splitting wood or making sure it's dry. We only had to chop off a few pieces from a log to start a good fire for the whole night.
I would also almost assume you had at some point of the camp a time where smoke would come out of the intake holes, would chug like a train puffing smoke out, you would panic, being a woodstove newbie, open the door, the flame would take off and then right itself to take the smoke out the exhaust.that's what happened to me anyways when I had issues that you're describing. frustrated the crap out of me.
Quote from: 92xj on November 18, 2015, 01:12:18 PMI would also almost assume you had at some point of the camp a time where smoke would come out of the intake holes, would chug like a train puffing smoke out, you would panic, being a woodstove newbie, open the door, the flame would take off and then right itself to take the smoke out the exhaust.that's what happened to me anyways when I had issues that you're describing. frustrated the crap out of me.Negative on that. I'm not a "woodstove newbie", just a wall tent/stove/set it all up newbie. I grew up back east in a house where we only used wood to heat with. Both guys were from back east and both burn lots of wood.