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Wood burner air vents open or closed.
Wood burning stoves have air vents that have been specifically designed in every model to allow for a regulated control of air flow into the fire.
This can be done in conjunction with slowly closing down the air vents until the wood stove is operating at its most efficient level.
Most wood burning stoves and multi fuel stoves have a bottom air vent and a top air vent.
You don t want to leave your wood stove.
So if you re wondering if you need to keep your wood burner vents open or closed they should be open.
Air in and air out.
Wood burns best with a good bed of ash laid down in the bottom of the stove and an air supply from the top.
Open the vents until they do and then close them as needed by turning the vents clockwise a few turns at a time until the logs continue to burn and.
The air permeability rule for log burners.
If you keep the damper open the fire will build and the smoke and soot will vent through your chimney.
To keep a fire going in a wood burning stove the air vents shouldn t be fully open but closed down enough so that enough air is being supplied to the fire to keep it going without causing it to smolder.
If the door of a stove is left open the control of air flow into the stove is lost preventing the stove from operating the way is was designed to.
By opening the wood stove damper it allows air to get into the chimney so the fire can start.
Houses built after 2008 are required to achieve an air permeability of 5 m3 hm2 or less.
On initially lighting it can be an advantage to crack the door open slightly to provide.