@@sixlegsnimrodin order for secondary burn to work good the fire box needs to be sealed good so no air leaks preventing it from doing its thing. A small half inch hole toward the bottom to feed the lower half of the fire is all that's needed when the stove gets hot enough.
It is an old stove, When I first rebuilt it I did not even know about secondary burn I should have sealed it up better then. Now I dont want to redo it. I am just messing around.
More flame, less smoke, longer burn time. :)
Nice job
Ceramic wool is what you're thinking of I believe. We used it at a steel mill I worked at
yes thats it.
LMAO. You might make it on the tube
I dont know, This is new to me. We will see how it goes
?????
Why didn't you seal off the top burners
why?
@@sixlegsnimrod gas escape,- carbon monoxide
@@sixlegsnimrodin order for secondary burn to work good the fire box needs to be sealed good so no air leaks preventing it from doing its thing. A small half inch hole toward the bottom to feed the lower half of the fire is all that's needed when the stove gets hot enough.
It is an old stove, When I first rebuilt it I did not even know about secondary burn I should have sealed it up better then. Now I dont want to redo it. I am just messing around.
Its probably from 60 to 100 years old and was never designed to be airtight.
Vermiculite board