Do Not Burn - United States Stove Company HotBlast 1331E Owner's Operation And Instruction Manual

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The top down method of fire building is recommended for this appliance. After making sure that the stove air
intake controls are fully open (both air controls open to there maximum setting). Place the largest pieces of wood
on the bottom, laid in parallel and close together. Smaller pieces are placed in a second layer, crossways to the
first. A third layer of still smaller pieces is laid crossways to the second, this time with some spaces between. Then
a fourth layer of loose, small kindling and twisted newspaper sheets tops off the pile.
Higher efficiencies and lower emissions generally result when burning air dried seasoned hardwoods, as
compared to softwoods or to green or freshly cut hardwoods.

DO NOT BURN:

1. Garbage;
2. Lawn clippings or yard waste;
3. Materials containing rubber, including tires;
4. Materials containing plastic;
5. Waste petroleum products, paints or paint
thinners, or asphalt products;
6. Materials containing asbestos;
7. Construction or demolition debris;
8. Railroad ties or pressure-treated wood;
9. Manure or animal remains;
Burning these materials may result in release of toxic fumes or render the heater ineffective and cause smoke.
Do not burn manufactured logs made of wax impregnated sawdust or logs with any chemical additives.
Manufactured logs made of 100% compressed sawdust can be burned, but be careful burning too much of
these logs at the same time. Start with one manufactured log and see how the stove reacts. You can increase
the number of logs burned at a time to making sure the temperature never rises higher than 475 °F (246 °C) on a
magnetic thermometer for installation on single wall stove pipes or 900 °F (482 °C) on a probe thermometer for
installation on double wall stove pipe. The thermometer should be placed about 18" (457 mm) above the stove.
Higher temperatures can lead to overheat and damage your stove.
Dead wood lying on the forest floor should be considered wet, and requires full seasoning
time. Standing dead wood can usually be considered to be about 2/3 seasoned.
Splitting and stacking wood before it is stored accelerates drying time. Storing wood on
an elevated surface from the ground and under a cover or covered area from rain or
snow also accelerates drying time. A good indicator if wood is ready to burn is to check
the piece ends. If there are cracks radiating in all directions from the center then the
wood should be dry enough to burn. If your wood sizzles in the fire, even though the
surface is dry, it may not be fully cured, and should be seasoned longer.
Your furnace was designed
to burn wood only; no other
materials should be burned.
Waste and other flammable
materials
should
not
burned in your furnace. DO
NOT
USE
CHEMICALS
FLUIDS TO START THE FIRE.
DO
NOT
BURN
GARBAGE,
GASOLINE, NAPTHA, ENGINE
OIL, OR OTHER INAPPROPRIATE
MATERIALS. Any type of wood
may be used in your furnace,
but specific varieties have
better
energy
yields
others.
Please
consult
provided table in order to
make the best possible choice.
TYPE
(LBS. CU. FT., DRY)
Hickory
be
White Oak
OR
Red Oak
Beech
Sugar Maple
Black Oak
than
Ash
the
Yellow Birch
Red Maple
Paper Birch
Elm/
Sycamore
Red Spruce
10. Salt water driftwood or other previously salt water
saturated materials;
11. Unseasoned wood; or
12. Paper
products,
particleboard. The prohibition against burning
these materials does not prohibit the use of fire
starters made from paper, cardboard, saw dust,
wax and similar substances for the purpose of
starting a fire in an affected wood heater.
WEIGHT
PER CORD
63
4500
48
4100
46
3900
45
3800
44
3700
43
3700
42
3600
40
3400
38
3200
37
3100
34
2900
29
1800
-16-
cardboard,
plywood,
EFFICIENCY
MILLIONS BTU's/
SPLITS
RANKING
1.0
Well
.9
Fair
.8
Fair
.7
Hard
.6
Fair
.6
Fair
.5
Well
.4
Hard
.3
Fair
.3
Easy
Very
.2
Difficult
.1
Easy
or
CORD
31.5
28.6
27.4
26.8
26.2
25.6
25.0
23.8
22.6
22.1
20.1
16.1

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