How to Light or Start a Fire in a Wood Burning Stove and Keep it Burning
82Come On Baby, Light My Fire!
Lighting a fire may sound old-fashioned but there are many reasons, including the need to save money in a recession, why the sale of open fires and wood burning stoves in particular, are currently booming across the globe.
This Hub explains
the differences between lighting, igniting or starting a wood burning stove and an ordinary, 'open' log
fire. It also contains tips about lighting wood stoves and how to successfully maintain the fire once lit.
If you want to know more about wood burning stoves or the reasons why wood burning stoves are cost effective and environmentally friendly in these recessionary times then read: Wood Burning Stoves and Ten Reasons Why Now is the Right Time to Burn Wood
Features of the Wood Burning Stove
Before we get down to lighting the fire in a wood stove, it is helpful to understand some differences between ordinary fires and wood burning stoves:
- The
wood burning stove is in an enclosed metal box. It therefore takes a lot
of heat energy to get it hot (particularly if it is made of cast iron)
- Air intake is controlled by one or more valves
- The design means you can preheat the air so the stove burns much hotter than a conventional wood fire
- The wood stove is therefore much more efficient in terms of converting fuel to heat energy than an ordinary fire
Preparing the Fire
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Like a conventional fire, you can either start your wood stove fire with Firelighters or old Newspaper. With a wood stove it is good to light the new fire on a bed of ash so don't remove all the old ash when preparing the fire.
Open the stove door and add several sheets of scrunched up paper to the top of the ash. Some people prefer to roll the paper into a cylinder then twist the ends together.
Next add small bits of Kindling, on top of your paper or firelighter, typically arranged in a 'wigwam' pattern. Kindling is any easy burning material but typically a soft wood like pine chopped into small pieces with a hand axe.
Firelighters are normally made of paraffin wax. Some manufacturers add small amounts of kerosene or other light fuel to the wax in order to make them burn better. This means they are a bit more smelly than newspaper but slightly easier to use and more efficient at getting the fire started.
Have larger pieces of dry, seasoned wood ready to add as the fire catches hold.
Check out the links to the right of this article to find out how to obtain wood, saw it up, split it if necessary and finally, store it ready for burning.
Air Input Controls
Your wood burning stove may typically have both a primary and secondary air input controls or valves. In the photo of the Morso Squirrel (right), the circular control on the front is the primary control and there is a slider control for the secondary valve under the ash box at the bottom of the stove.
When lighting the wood burning stove these should both be open in order to get as much oxygen to the fire as possible. Until the fire really gets going, it is also advisable to keep the door open too.
The Primary Air Input Valve brings cold air from the room under the burning wood. The Secondary Air Input Valve takes air which has circulated around the stove and over the front viewing glass (helping to remove soot and keep it clear).
This means the secondary air is already very hot when it meets with the hot gases from the burning wood. The gases therefore ignite in the upper part of the stove making the stove much hotter and releasing more heat energy from the wood than with a conventional, open fire.
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We Have Ignition!
This is the exciting bit. Light the newspaper in several places or the firelighter and gradually add larger pieces of wood as the fire burns. Beware of putting on too much wood at once as this will lower the temperature.
The goal with a wood stove is to get the stove itself up to working temperature as quickly as possible. ideally you need to end up with a bed of glowing red embers before you add more wood.
Also make sure the wood is seasoned (has been stored long enought for the wood to dry out fully). Seasoning typically takes about a year for newly felled wood.
I keep my fire wood in my garage so I bring it into the house before burning and stack it next to the stove. This ensures it is already warm and dry before it is added to the fire.
Generally, build up the temperature of the stove using soft wood such as Pine (which burns easily) and burn harder woods such as Oak once the stove is really hot. Once the fire has warmed up you can close the front door.
More on Those Air Intake Valves
As the stove is warming up it makes sense to keep both valves fully open and get as much oxygen to the fire as possible, Once it is really hot you can close the primary (cold) air input and use only the secondary (hot) air valve to control the fire.
This makes the fire operate at a higher temperature and means you get more heat energy from the wood you are burning. Hot air ensures flammable gases are burnt and not lost up the chimney as is the case with a conventional, open fire.
If your fire is burning too quickly or is too hot you can reduce the secondary air flow. Note that if you completely close both valves then the fire will quickly go out as it has no oxygen supply.
If the fire isn't burning well enough then open up the primary valve for a short period of time and/or open the front door slightly to get more oxygen into the fire.
Light My Fire
Lighting and maintaining a fire in a wood burning stove is, in some respects, different to lighting and maintaining a conventional open log fire.
The main differences are the need to control the air supply and the understanding that you need to get the stove itself hot before it will burn efficiently.
There is nothing quite like a real log fire on a cold winter's day. And one of the many advantages of the wood stove is you can leave it burning while you go out knowing that the fire is safely enclosed.
Like any skill, the best way to learn wood burning stove lighting is by doing. You'll learn by trial and error how to get the best from your own particular model of stove.
If you enjoy an open fire then you'll find a wood burning stove even more satisfying. Its hotter, more efficient and safer. So now you know what to do - Get that wood burning stove lit and then keep that fire burning!
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Good info. Got anything to say about pellet stoves?
Great info about stoves. I'm gonna write some hubs about wood burning stoves in the near future as well! Happy trails!!!
Don't forget also to have your chimney regularly maintained as this can affect how your wood burning stove works if you neglect to remove blockages and have it swept. Great hub by the way!
i get smoke out the front of stove, is that a back draft ty jerry
Very helpful and interesting information in the article. Once you get the air flow balance right, the stove will heat more efficiently.
Useful hub! I voted it up.
many thanks was having a bit of difficulty with my new stove.
Fantastic hub, I'm finally using our stove to its full potential. Thanks.
Do you know much about wood burning inserts? We don't seem to be getting as much heat as I thought we would. A little worried seeing as how it's only October...
I found this when researching how to start a wood stove fire after 4 attempts and my kids and I being cold. Thanks for the great tips - living in a trailer, wish I had a man to help me with these kind of things! :(
Great site. Michelle...you don't need a man to help you!You can do anything you set your mind to! I have a woodstove with front intake valves & someone INSISTED that I needed to have a damper in the stove pipe...seems to have been a "not so good idea". How do I keep to stove running to its full potential by just using the inlet valves & closing up the added damper? Wood is now burning up like crazy. I do not have any other valves built into the stove other then the two round ones in the one door (and, of course, the damper that is now in the pipe that I would rather not be using at all-brilliant idea that my husband went along with!).
I get smoke from the front of the stove when I open the doors. Why is that?
@Carden: You get some smoke when you open the front doors because the smoke sees it as a larger exit. Nothing to worry about.
We have a new log fire and it is still giving off a bad smell.
my logburner seems to explode or combust inside from time to time. this happens when the rear vent is partially closed .this goes with a bang ,rattles the doors etc and frightens us all.. when i open the rear vent it burns hotter and doesnt explode . is there a reason for this. my old burner didnt do this ps my burner is a godin norvegienne















Whichburner 2 years ago
A nice introduction to the world of Stoves. Keep The home Fires Burning!