The Care and Feeding of a Warm Morning Stove
- Smokeyja
- Member
- Posts: 1997
- Joined: Mon. Nov. 21, 2011 6:57 pm
- Location: Richmond, VA.
- Baseburners & Antiques: Glenwood #6 baseheater, Richmond Advance Range, WarmMorning 414a x2
- Coal Size/Type: Nut / Anthracite
- Other Heating: none
- Contact:
I used rutlands stove polish on the entire stove and then clear coated it with stove bright high temp paint, but the clear coat burned off most of the stove. Maybe if you paint it black and don't use the Rutlands and give it a couple of coats while curing it in between, you may get a good solid, lasting paint. Never in my life have I gotten a high temp paint to not bun off eventually. This is why I just stick to rutlands stove polish now.coalturkey wrote:I am using a warm morning stove model 523 which is 100 lb capacity. I am burning bit that I bought at the auction with the stove. In looking at the flue bricks, why couldn't one make a wooden mold with a slightly tapered peg for the flue, line withe fiberglass resin so it wouldn't stick and cast your own with Rutland castable refractory cement? At $95 a pop there is no way one can afford to reline one and they are the best darn stove and also cheap to get. I have 3 now and will buy more as I find them. I want to dis-assemble mine next summer and seal all the joints like new so I have better control of the fire but 2 days is easy in mild weather. I burn blashek in the 2nd one and it is a beautiful thing. Almost no clinkers or ash and shut right down 600 deg on the side and 200 in the stack at the baro above the manual damper. I think they compare very favorably with stoves costing $2500 and I paid $15 for mine. Does any one know of a paint that would take the temps to paint the sheet metal?
Hey all,
Just inherited a model 818 from my uncle who never used the stove. If anybody is in the southwest Indiana area (Vincennes), I just bought a truckload of coal from Triad Mining in Freelandville for $40/ton. I don't know what kind of coal it is. I asked the person running the scale booth, and nobody had any idea. Looks like coal, though.
Anyways, we're messing with the stove trying to find out the optimal placement of the lower draft door, should we keep the upper slider open, etc. Any rules of thumb that would help? I would like a magnetic stove thermometer, but we have an IR laser thermometer for the time being. Also, we don't have an inline damper in the flue. Is that important to have?
As far as a heat reclaimer, we have a desk fan blowing onto the upper end of the stove pipe. Helps a bit.
Just inherited a model 818 from my uncle who never used the stove. If anybody is in the southwest Indiana area (Vincennes), I just bought a truckload of coal from Triad Mining in Freelandville for $40/ton. I don't know what kind of coal it is. I asked the person running the scale booth, and nobody had any idea. Looks like coal, though.
Anyways, we're messing with the stove trying to find out the optimal placement of the lower draft door, should we keep the upper slider open, etc. Any rules of thumb that would help? I would like a magnetic stove thermometer, but we have an IR laser thermometer for the time being. Also, we don't have an inline damper in the flue. Is that important to have?
As far as a heat reclaimer, we have a desk fan blowing onto the upper end of the stove pipe. Helps a bit.
See my post in this thread: "New" Warm Morning 500
Don't use a pipe damper. Use an 8" flue. Hopefully the coal you obtained is large lumps and not fines or slack. Use more overfire and less underfire air.
Don't use a pipe damper. Use an 8" flue. Hopefully the coal you obtained is large lumps and not fines or slack. Use more overfire and less underfire air.
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- Member
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- Hand Fed Coal Boiler: Harman SF360
- Hand Fed Coal Stove: T.O.M (Warm Morning converted to baseburner by Steve) Round Oak 1917 Door model O-3, Warm Morning 400, Warm Morning 524, Warm Morning 414,Florence No.77, Warm Morning 523-b
- Hand Fed Coal Furnace: Clayton 7.1/DS Machine basement stove/ Harman SF1500
- Baseburners & Antiques: Renown Parlor stove 87B
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- Sunny Boy
- Member
- Posts: 25749
- Joined: Mon. Nov. 11, 2013 1:40 pm
- Location: Central NY
- Hand Fed Coal Boiler: Anthracite Industrial, domestic hot water heater
- Baseburners & Antiques: Glenwood range 208, # 6 base heater, 2 Modern Oak 118.
- Coal Size/Type: Nuts !
- Other Heating: Oil &electric plenum furnace
Welcome Rono,
If he doesn't post soon, try pm'ing member "Kingcoal". He's our resident Warm Morning specialist.
In the meantime, the Warm Mornings have been posted about a lot on this site. Try using the search function, like this. search.php?keywords=%22Warm+Morning%22&sf=firstpost
It brought up 474 hits with just using "Warm Morning" in quote marks.
Paul
If he doesn't post soon, try pm'ing member "Kingcoal". He's our resident Warm Morning specialist.
In the meantime, the Warm Mornings have been posted about a lot on this site. Try using the search function, like this. search.php?keywords=%22Warm+Morning%22&sf=firstpost
It brought up 474 hits with just using "Warm Morning" in quote marks.
Paul