Burning Wood Overnight - A Full Day of Operating a Wood Stove

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  • Опубліковано 4 жов 2024
  • Join me for a full day in the life of burning wood around the clock. You will see how much wood I burn, how many times I have to load the stove (hint, it's 4), and how I get a good overnight burn in my Pacific Energy Alderlea T6 Wood Stove.
    Music Credits:
    Parasail - Silent Partner

КОМЕНТАРІ • 26

  • @danielhanawalt4998
    @danielhanawalt4998 День тому

    A good fireplace can't be beat.

  • @wobdeehomestead
    @wobdeehomestead Місяць тому

    Stove top or flue thermometers are a good tool to fine tune your burn. You would probably have a longer more efficient burn of your turned the air down sooner like 15-30 min after reloading.

  • @mdocod
    @mdocod 19 днів тому +1

    Great choice of wood stove. The alderlea stoves are fantastic. Great workhorses for applications requiring more significant BTU demands of 3-5 reloads per 24 hours. Cast jacket should produce softer radiation and better direct-to-air heating.

  • @andrewseamans1419
    @andrewseamans1419 22 дні тому

    I am curious why you wouldn't load it up completely for the overnight burn? Looks good!

    • @koreyfreemanofficial
      @koreyfreemanofficial  21 день тому +4

      Thanks. Good question! I had heard it's good to leave a bit of air space, but mostly I think it's just the stingy part of me that feels like adding more wood is just going to make it burn hotter and not last longer lol

  • @7350652
    @7350652 23 дні тому

    thanks

  • @Dunsterdam
    @Dunsterdam 2 місяці тому +1

    Good video, just wondering how you keep your glass so clean? Thanks.

    • @koreyfreemanofficial
      @koreyfreemanofficial  2 місяці тому

      Thanks! I cleaned the glass before I shot the video. I don't really have any great tips. I think a lot of it comes down to the stove design. Smoldering fires will make it black, so burning seasoned wood should help, as well as letting the fire rip for awhile after refilling the firebox to quickly get a good hot flame established.

    • @russellmueller8179
      @russellmueller8179 4 дні тому

      The main reasons for dirty glass is incomplete combustion . Not dry / unseasond wood or not hot enough (more air) stoves differ

    • @Lonewolf_02420
      @Lonewolf_02420 День тому

      You can use wood ash to clean the glass door look it up

  • @annaaron3510
    @annaaron3510 5 місяців тому +1

    Wood wall clearance too close to the stove ? Wood alone or "up from" SAY 65 F frtom a central furnace thermostat ? Species ?

    • @koreyfreemanofficial
      @koreyfreemanofficial  5 місяців тому +1

      If this stove is in a corner installation like i have here it can go like 5" or so away from the wall. Pacific Energy's website has a document showing the clearances.
      We primarily just run the wood stove along with a propane fireplace in a very drafty room at the far end of the house. We only ran our furnace a few times this past winter.
      I burn a mix of hardwoods. Maple, ash, birch, oak, black cherry. Not sure what i was burning in this video.

    • @annaaron3510
      @annaaron3510 3 дні тому

      @@koreyfreemanofficial So central furnace " a few times" is like being almost pregnant. 😁

  • @dannyramos5485
    @dannyramos5485 День тому

    On average how many pieces of wood do you use to heat up your cabin in a 24 hour period?

    • @Lonewolf_02420
      @Lonewolf_02420 День тому

      Around 15

    • @koreyfreemanofficial
      @koreyfreemanofficial  День тому

      I have never tracked that. A lot of variables tho like building insulation, outdoor temp, size of splits, size of building

  • @itsyurb0ylayy4
    @itsyurb0ylayy4 7 місяців тому

    Hey, where do you put the air control at to heat your house, do you set it in the middle? And do you just put it on low when you want it to go over night ? How big is your house ? Is your house drafty?

    • @koreyfreemanofficial
      @koreyfreemanofficial  7 місяців тому +1

      We have a small 1900s farm house. Its a small footprint but has 3 stories above ground and tall ceilings and open staircases. I have been working at air sealing/insulating but it still has some very drafty sections that i need to fix.
      During the day typically we run the stove with the damper all the way closed, if the house gets cool we tend to just open the damper full blast until it gets toasty, then dial it back to fullly closed. Also i find after restocking the fire it seems to help to leave the air wide open for a few minutes. At night we always run it fully closed so that there is a nice bed of coals in the morning.
      So basically we mostly run wide open for brief stints and fully closed. On colder days you can put lots of logs in the firebox for more heat, on milder days you can go with less. Honestly, it's a very easy stove to operate and isnt picky with how you run it. What I described isn't the only way to do it, it's just the rut we fell into this mild winter. This was our first winter with this stove.

    • @itsyurb0ylayy4
      @itsyurb0ylayy4 7 місяців тому

      @@koreyfreemanofficial Okay sounds good. I think that’s what I am doing wrong. I’m not burning hot enough. But I know the book says. If anything is glowing red. That’s a sign of a overfired, and my stove never gets like that. I’m guessing you can burn it hot as long it doesn’t glow red. I had my stove for 2 years and I’m now getting used to it now. Thank you for getting back to me

    • @koreyfreemanofficial
      @koreyfreemanofficial  7 місяців тому +1

      @@itsyurb0ylayy4 what issue are you having? Not enough heat output? I noticed a huge difference in heat output moving from wood that was still pretty green to more seasoned wood. Seasoned wood burns so much hotter. Ideally season your wood for 12+ months.
      Beyond having dry wood, try to get the fire nice and hot initially. FILL the firebox up, and leave the damper wide open and let it rip until your house reaches the temperature you want it. At that point you can throttle back the air, and I think you will find that the heat output is much better after you have that great bed of hot coals. Don't be shy with the amount of wood you load, and letting her get really hot before dialling it back. Stoves are made to get hot.
      It seems to me that if you try to be stingy with the wood and air supply the efficiency of the stove drops off a cliff. Get it hot, then let it coast.

    • @itsyurb0ylayy4
      @itsyurb0ylayy4 7 місяців тому

      @@koreyfreemanofficial the issue what I was having was, that I was in a group with they was helping me, when and they was telling me. Wait till the flue temperature is 300, then turn it down, once the flue temperature is 350 turn it down again, and once again when it gets to 350 but this time only 25 percent, and once I started doing that, it will put out the heat, but it will raise the temperature of the house 1 degrees per hour. Mine you the stove is in the basement. But I watched your video 5 times, so I can take the details more properly. And I noticed you wasn’t getting a lot left. And you that’s one of the problems that I was having, I will have large coals . I will rake them to the front.. but I been doing what you did for two days and I see the difference already.. I don’t get a large Coal bed. And I also think I wasn’t letting the wood to burn its full y
      Cycle. I think I was having this problem before, because I wasn’t getting the stove out enough I think I was scared that I will damage my stove, a lot of people on Facebook been saying keep the stove temperature 650. I noticed when I keep the air control in the middle of the that’s when it cranks out the heat but this is when the stove is in the 700-750. The dealer told me the stove can handle it but only for a hour tho, but when the stove is at those temperatures nothing is glowing red, but if anything is glowing I turn it down lil, till the red glowing goes away. But I noticed the book doesn’t have a overfired temperature. All it says is if anything is glowing red that’s a sign of a overfired. But I called pacific energy and they even told me the the stove can handle it just check your stove to see if there’s any damage every couple of months.

  • @russellmueller8179
    @russellmueller8179 4 дні тому

    Wow dude you spend way to much time on this! #1learn you're stove better #2good dry hardwood is yer best friend and if you have softwood mix it in#3dont be afriad to split wood smaller,as this will avoid lag time.nothing worse than three big hunks hiss and sputter for forty minutes while you're kids &you shiver. Above all lose the wood behind your stove(omg)and don't replace it with wonder board.(tile backer) those white specks in it are styrofoam,half of napalm.after 50 years of heating with wood with various types of stoves I'd liketo think I know what I'm talkin about.there is nothing worse than standing on frozen ground at 3am in sleet hearing your kids cry and seeing the fire department hose your house down.has not happened to me , don't let it happen to you may yer wood be dry and yer pipes be clean,split wood not atoms!

    • @koreyfreemanofficial
      @koreyfreemanofficial  4 дні тому

      Smaller splits is something I am slowly adapting to in my brain! This stove has very tight clearances and was installed by a WETT certified installer. It's within code. Thanks for the comment!