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Author Topic: Stove mishaps  (Read 17292 times)

oldchenowth

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Re: Stove mishaps
« Reply #15 on: January 31, 2013, 10:13:48 AM »

Seriously, glad your ok.   I hope you opened a new can of whoop ass on the dude.
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bajonesy77

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Re: Stove mishaps
« Reply #16 on: January 31, 2013, 11:26:51 AM »

 This is my true story, ENJOY! My mishap just happened this past monday the 28th of january 2013. My wife had got up around 6:30am to get ready to goto work while I was sleeping like a bear in hibernation because Im working the evening shift and had stayed up to watch my recorded show AXE MEN and eat a bag of popcorn! I was awakened to her screaming the house is freezing and the vents are blowing cold air! I managed to open my eyes and pull the covers back to sit up in bed to start getting dressed when I realized, it's freezing in here! What is going on! My heart skipped a beat and my adrenaline started pumping to prepare me for the catostrophic event that had forced me from my beauty sleep. My first two thoughts- 1. My boiler had sprung a leak and all the hot water had ran out so it was no longer making it to my house! 2. My pump has died and I dont have a spare so Im going to have to start up the ole trusty indoor wood stove! I threw on some sweat pants, a tee shirt, my old sneakers and my fill up the wood stove jacket and headed down into the basement. I first went to the breaker box to check and see if  maybe a breaker had just kicked and I could reset it and go back to bed, but no such luck. I threw open the basement door heading outside into the semi-lit morning  when I quickly realized we had gotten the freezing rain the weather man was forecasting, I almost fell on my hiney with my first step and boy was it a doozy. I looked like a person ice skating for the first time, just could'nt get my feet under me, arm's out like they were air plane wings and I was flying! Much smaller more careful steps from here on out I promise. I made my way to my stove thats about 60 feet away and slightly down hill making sure each foot was secure before moving the other. Like I said earlier we had gotten freezing rain so everthing was wet and frozen so from a diastance I thought the worst. I finally made it to the stove and opened the door where the water level and ranco are housed and to my surprise the water level was still up, No Leaks!I then opened the firebox door and all was dry and smoldering just like it has been so I closed it up. Looked back up to the ranco and no temperature was being displayed, but I checked the breaker! Dang it my thermostat had failed me I thought but that doesn't explain why the pumps not running.....Im on to something here. I think it was at this point that my brain really woke up.........we have a underground dog fence with lightning protection and it's on a ground fault interrupter outlet. MY stove is on a outlet on the other side of the basement but it is tied into that same gfi, ding ding ding we have a winner! I think? Slowly back up the slope to the basement and inside I slid, sure enough the light on the dog fence is off, yes I figured it out finally! Or had I? I removed the large plug for the lightining protector for the fence and hit the reset.......it poped right back out! WTF! OK maybe the pump has shorted and is kicking the gfi off so I walked to the other side of the basement and pulled the plug going to the outdoor wood stove, still the gfi would not reset. What now? Well there is one more thing plugged into the outlet where the stove is plugged in, it goes to the block heater on our Ford superduty diesel, could it have shorted and be my problem? Lets find out. I slid back out side and looked to my surprise to see the truck is plugged in and the plug is hanging out the front bumper with the cord covered in ice. WOW! I unplugged the cord from the truck, threw it back toward the basement, slid back inside unplugged the extension cord from the wall, ran back to the gfi, hit the reset and PRESTO! POWER! The water temp. in the stove was 187 while the temp. in the house had dropped to 62 degrees, I know freezing right. LOL Took a minute or two and the lines coming into the heat exchanger were hot and the vents in the house were blowing hot air. I made my grand entrance back into the house stating that I had fixed the problem but it was her fault. "How was it my fault"? She asked. Well I said "you know that truck that you plugged up so it would start so easy and have almost instant heat and no frozen ice on the windshield"? "Yea" she said. "Well it's frozen like a giant block of ice and the house was cold beacuse when you plugged it up you didn't tuck the plug in the bumper and all that rain/ice ran down in the plug and kicked the gfi out on the stove, truck, and dog fence" I said. "Oh, well I didn't mean to" she said as I laid back down to goto sleep in my nice warm house!
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willieG

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Re: Stove mishaps
« Reply #17 on: February 01, 2013, 08:27:22 PM »

i would be moving my wood stove plug to a non gfi one, they are just too finiky for me. ground your stove to the earth good and use a normal plug to energize it...but it waas a great story :thumbup:
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J Cooch

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Re: Stove mishaps
« Reply #18 on: February 01, 2013, 08:56:36 PM »

Yeah woman Your ground fault. HAHA!!! Put that boiler on the line side of that GFI if possible. Never wake up to a cold house & wife, with a runaway dog ,frozen truck & bolier.
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Scott7m

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Re: Stove mishaps
« Reply #19 on: February 01, 2013, 09:57:45 PM »

I hate gfi plug ins, I usually replace them if the stove I'm installing comes with one

Good story though lol
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Scott7m

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Re: Stove mishaps
« Reply #20 on: November 05, 2013, 03:53:30 PM »

Was reading back through the forum and thought people could get a good laugh out of this and hopefully not make a goofy mistake such as this....   :bash:
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slimjim

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Re: Stove mishaps
« Reply #21 on: November 05, 2013, 04:28:50 PM »

There's two of the best stories Iv'e heard in a long time thanks guys, you put a smile on my face, I'll try to think of one myself.
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Scott7m

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Re: Stove mishaps
« Reply #22 on: November 05, 2013, 05:08:06 PM »

There's two of the best stories Iv'e heard in a long time thanks guys, you put a smile on my face, I'll try to think of one myself.
.

You gotta watch em slim, ppl will try anything lol
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victor6deep

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Re: Stove mishaps
« Reply #23 on: November 05, 2013, 07:29:01 PM »

I changed the oil in my car last winter and decided my firebox could burn 5qts of oil pretty easy? Long story short I tossed all of it in my stove on top of the wood packed in there. I quick closed the door and for some dumbass reason I opened the door to see what would happen..........kapowwwwww frikkin eyebrows singed along with arm hair and my head hair. I swear my face took a sunburn from that heat. What a dbag I was.
« Last Edit: November 05, 2013, 07:46:56 PM by victor6deep »
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slimjim

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Re: Stove mishaps
« Reply #24 on: November 05, 2013, 08:29:29 PM »

As I mentioned a while ago on another post, thats how I keep that fairly attractive beard and long hair trimmed for the wife, she says the burned hair smells better than the cigars anyway
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woodwalker2010

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Re: Stove mishaps
« Reply #25 on: November 05, 2013, 09:37:27 PM »

This is wood burning related but not an OWB. About 15 years ago I was working out in a rural part of the county I live in and was tooling down the road headed for my next job when I noticed flames shooting probably six feet out of the chimney of an old farm house about 150 yards off the road I was on. Kicking the accelerator I sped up to the house and ran to the front door. Now, I knew the folks that lived here, an elderly couple in their mid eighties at the time, so I just ran on in yelling "your chimney's on fire, your chimney's on fire." I went to the stove and closed the damper hoping to cut the air off. Just then Mrs. Smith (name changed to protect the innocent) comes shuffling around the corner and I tell her to call the fire dept., (no cell phone back then). Mrs. Smith being hard of hearing, asks me if I'm staying for supper. :-\ I raise my voice some and repeat, this time asking where Mr. Smith is. She tells me he is in the barn, so I assume this time she also heard the part about the fire and calling help. So I take off and run for the barn. The barn is about 100 yards from the house, a good walk for Mr. Smith, an even greater run for me. Finally getting to the barn I find Mr. Smith and try to explain the situation. Now after my 100 yard dash I don't have much wind left so Mr. Smith with good hearing has a hard time understanding me. So finally with what seems like eternity I get my point across. Here is the reply I got. "Bout time, I've been shovin' cardboard in that thing all day trying to get it to burn." So I said you want me to call and tell the fire dept. not to come? and he says "Well it won't burn clean if the fire dept. puts it out will it?" So I start my mad dash back to the house to try and head off the fire dept. When I get in and go to the phone Mrs. Smith asks if there is a problem, knowing by her question that she never heard about the fire I just put the phone back down and fall into a chair at the table. Now this time when she asked if I was staying for supper, I said in a loud tone, "What are we having?"  Everything worked out, Mr. Smith gets his chimney burnt clean and I get a nice supper. I sure do miss those folks. He cut a lot of his wood his self up to the day he died. Come to find out he cleaned his chimney every year like that. I would be nervous trying that with my house chimney, but didn't seem to bother him. Sure gave me a scare.
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stratton

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Re: Stove mishaps
« Reply #26 on: November 05, 2013, 10:54:26 PM »

I can read these stories all night!!!
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Scott7m

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Re: Stove mishaps
« Reply #27 on: November 06, 2013, 06:57:39 AM »

Lol good one
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Roger2561

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Re: Stove mishaps
« Reply #28 on: November 06, 2013, 11:05:40 AM »

All I got to offer is, I clean my OWB every couple of weeks, especially the primary air holes.  To do this you have stick the entire upper half of your body in the firebox to reach those in the back.  I have come to learn that if you have sneeze, DON"T do it while your head is in the firebox!  WOW!  I was the most beautiful shade of BLACK I've ever seen.  I think it took me an hour in the shower to get all of the grime and gunk off my face, every crease and out of my hair.  I can honestly say that this was the first time I left a ring of dirt in the shower (The drain plugged on me). 
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slimjim

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Re: Stove mishaps
« Reply #29 on: November 06, 2013, 03:33:36 PM »

Try replacing firebrick in the middle of the winter with a hot Seqouyah Paradise E-3400, nice stove, not a nice place to be!
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