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Whuff's the
problem?
Q:- Last year I was experiencing
puff-backs, particularly on cold evenings, when I set back the
fire unit for the evening. The chimney is very tall and oversized
for the stove. I intend to install a flue. Will the flue solve
the puff-back problem?
A:- Chances are your back-puffing episodes aren't being caused
entirely by the lack of a properly sized flue, although the extreme
updraft that can be created by an oversized flue could certainly
be a contributing factor.
When you have a rip-roaring
woodstove fire going, and a chimney charged with rising superheated
exhaust gases, the air flow through the firebox is considerable.
If you cut down the supply of air too abruptly, the fire instantly
consumes the available air, creating a powerful vacuum inside
the stove. If strong enough, this vacuum will sometimes reverse
the flow inside the chimney, pulling a "gulp" of air
back down the flue into the firebox.
When this pocket of air
hits the fire, a mini-explosion occurs, and the resulting sudden
extreme pressurization inside the firebox forces smoke out through
the draft control, door gasketing and other tiny openings that
exist in even the most "airtight" woodstoves.
This brief period of pressurization
is followed immediately by extreme depressurization, as the explosion
consumes all the available oxygen, and another gulp of air is
pulled down the chimney, causing the process to repeat. We call
this "whuffing", due to the usual accompanying sound
of muffled explosions. In extreme cases, these repeated explosions
can cause the stove to actually move around on the hearth!
Although whuffing usually
only occurs for a short time (until the starved-for-air fire
dies down, reducing the vacuum effect), it should be avoided,
as the repeated pressurization inside the stove caused by the
mini-explosions could fill the house with smoke, blow the door
open, disconnect the exhaust pipe, or damage the stove.
Whenever you've had a hot
fire going and want to "bank" it down for the night,
care must be taken not to cut down the air supply too suddenly.
Adjust your draft control to, say, half throttle (you'll have
to experiment a bit to find the setting that works best for you),
for a few minutes, then continue to turn it down in gradual stages,
so the fire can quench down slowly. If the stove starts to whuff,
open the draft control a bit to supply more air to the fire for
a few minutes, then resume your gradual reduction of combustion
air until you reach your all-night burn setting.
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