When used with dry wood and a well-drafting chimney system,
modern non-catalytic wood stoves burn fuel efficiently by the precise
control and delivery of primary and secondary air to the fire.
Long Burn Times
Progressive Burn Technology is designed to keep hot embers in the firebox.
This process is achieved by restricting the air in the back of the firebox,
leaving hot embers for you to start up your wood stove after it has burned all night.
Primary Air is drawn into the stove bottom through twin pilot injection ports, located 3” above
the firebox floor so you can build a good deep ember bed and not affect low burn or start-up.
In fact these injection ports are tuned to deliver a fast start-up.
Additional primary air is directed to the top of the door, acting
as an ultra strong air wash to keep the glass clean.
A single, easy-to-use air control adjusts the heat output and regulates the fire.
Clean Burning
Secondary air tubes constructed of heavy-duty 304 grade stainless steel
add super-heated air to the fire as the burn progresses to the front.
This maintains efficiencies and keeps emissions low.
The primary air available to the fire determines the intensity of heat
output and rate of fuel combustion; the greater the amount of air,
the greater the heat output and the faster the wood will burn.
The primary air setting determines the effectiveness of the glass door air wash;
the higher the setting, the cleaner the glass will be.
Radiant heat is maximized through the large glass area (177 sq. in.)