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Firewood, Heating and Wood Burning Equipment
Which Stove
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<blockquote data-quote="HittinSteel" data-source="post: 1485796" data-attributes="member: 28623"><p>I don't think the coaling issue is specific to one brand of stove as all wood goes through the burn cycle. The coaling stage will certainly produce less heat than when there are flames, which will result in house temp fluctuation. In the really cold weather, once the wood had been reduced to coals we would open the air draft all the way which would burn off the coals more quickly and allow for a reload. As you've mentioned, your unseasoned wood may be part of the problem also. Hopefully you have some better seasoned wood for this winter and can do a comparison.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="HittinSteel, post: 1485796, member: 28623"] I don't think the coaling issue is specific to one brand of stove as all wood goes through the burn cycle. The coaling stage will certainly produce less heat than when there are flames, which will result in house temp fluctuation. In the really cold weather, once the wood had been reduced to coals we would open the air draft all the way which would burn off the coals more quickly and allow for a reload. As you've mentioned, your unseasoned wood may be part of the problem also. Hopefully you have some better seasoned wood for this winter and can do a comparison. [/QUOTE]
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