Starting Your Stove - Comfort Bilt HP50S Owner's Manual

Hide thumbs Also See for HP50S:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Operation

Starting your Stove

After you have chosen the desired operation mode for your stove, press the ON/OFF button
to start the stove's ignite cycle.
When the stove turns on, "Igniting" will appear in the work stage box on the screen.
Once the fire is lit, and the stove achieves operating temperature, the work stage box on the screen will
read "Heating", and the room blower fan will engage.
During operation, the stove may display "Cleaning" periodically. This is an automatic cleaning that the
stove will perform.
The stove will continue operation until something interrupts that operation. (Low Temperature alerts due to
low pellets in hopper for example).
Information Screen
At any time, you can press the Information button (#5) once to
access the Running information screen.
On the top half of this screen, it will display running
information such as On/Off status, current heating level,
current run time, and Eco and WIFI indicators.
On the bottom half of this screen, it will display a real-time
diagnostic readout, that shows which devices are currently
engaging, as well as Hopper Temperature, and Room
Temperature readouts. (HT and RT)
Pressing the Information button a second time will access the
Stove information screen.
This screen will display information such as: Total ignite
times, total running time, and program and power
information.
Note: The correct information for this stove is the following:
Model: HP50S_U01
Voltage: ~115V
Frequency: 60Hz
What Does a Good Fire Look Like?
A good flame will be an active torch with a bright yellow center.
Streaking of blue near the bottom of the burn pot is also a good sign
of decent airflow pressure. Ash should reduce to a fine light gray
powder. Gritty brown ash usually indicates too much air pressure
under the burn pot, while dark/black ash indicates an air shortage.
Level 1: The fire height may fluctuate up and down at this level as
there is a lighter feed schedule, but on average the top should be
just above the lip of the burn pot.
Level 3: The fire should be a fairly stable torch that comes up
about half way up the chamber.
Level 5: The fire will be a tall torch, and the tops of the flame
should reach to about the underside of the heat tubes.
23
comfortbilt.net

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents