What switch do you have that is adjustable for the tundra.
http://www.arboristsite.com/community/attachments/image-jpg.385234/You just use a universal adjustable one you can get at any hvac store or on eBay for less than 20 bucks and set it for 105-110 .
The factory is set too high . It has to be blazing hot for it to tell the fan to come on and then the stupid thing kicks off too soon .very annoying . P IdeallyEach persons will be slightly different I set mine so the fan kicks on at around 107 degrees ( takes about 10 minutes with a warm unit) and it will generally stay on till the load is a coal bed about 10 h
Or so hrs later ( depending on conditions. ) I like the idea of it staying on longer it makes the tundra far better and increases circulation and comfort for us . When I first got mine it barely heated the house because of the ridiculous factory fan switch . Night and day improvement. As long as your wood is well seasoned and dry you shouldn't have an issue in my experience
Google "adjustable snap switch" there are tons that come up, get a "close on rise" in the right temp range...You have a part number and manufacturer, pic is nice but need informationinformation
I just changed mine out for an adjustable one. But, when I pulled the stock one, it was labeled 120-10F. So, I'm assuming that they've started to put lower temp snap discs in from the factory? I thought someone said the stock ones were 140 or something higher.
I set my new one for 110 degrees to see where that'll get me. I can't tell much of a difference in those 10 degrees but the blower runs longer (which seems to me a good thing). I'm getting more heat per load of wood.
Sounds like inviting trouble to me...the firebox has to be able to dissipate heat, cutting the air flow to half would surely allow things to go "nuclear" sooner or laterCan I combine both 8" outputs to 1 8" ?
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