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callofduty123 | 21:06 Thu 17th Nov 2011 | Home & Garden
7 Answers
hi peeps,
iv just spent the day installing a wood burning fire in my house it looks great and goes well with the house being a cornish converted barn but
i cant get that roaring flame i desire. Im using fire liters, paper, kindling and logs. The fire has a vent at the bottom and two at the top and it has a sealed door, so can anyone school me on when these should be open and closed to get a nice flame going.
Thank you
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You need them open to let the air in and get the flames going. But don't leave them open all the time or you'll be using up all your logs.
Light the burner, shut the doors and open the vents. If it still won't draw, open the doors a blow on it (under it, if you can - a pair of bellows is even better).

I found the best things to use on my log burner were "hot logs" to get the heat up and then a proper log to "pretty it up".
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cheers guys ill give it a whirl
A roaring flame indicates a high proportion of the heat going up the flue (as Ladybirder mentions). A decent log burner is designed to maximise heat output to the room, and this may be why you can't get the effect you wanted. Is the room getting warm enough? - that's surely the key output.
As per ladybirder and buildersmate, most of the time you don't want 'roaring flames' as it's a waste but you do need them to get it going. Once well alight you should partially close the vents to maintain a steady burn and this is completely dependent upon individual stove, quality/dryness of fuel and available draught. Every time you add more fuel you should re-open the vents to ensure the combustion doesn't get damped down too much and then reclose. Not great for 'restful' evenings in front of the fire but thems the brokes :-)
I find when lighting a fire in a cold grate it does take longer than when I've had a fire on the night before.
Have you fitted a flu into the old chimney? If your old chimney is too wide that can effect the draw of the fire.

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