Nice video Neil! What you are seeing is a perfectly normal startup. The flue needs to have the "contained air" heated in order for it to rise and start pulling in a good draw. Old timers with wood fired stoves would often light a pine-cone or roll of newspaper and hold it at the base of the chimney to get the flow going. If it's cold outside and you have a tall flue/chimney, the cold air contained in the stack actually resists the warmer air below...just like a plug in the system. That's why if you have a taller chimney it takes a little longer to get the draw started and why the pine-cone/newspaper is almost essential to get things moving more quickly. As the flue heats up, the draw increases and the smoke is pretty much "immediately" pulled up & out.
Hope that explains it well enough. By the way, I have always loved how you can see the layering of air moving in low (cool & clear) and exiting high (warm/hot & initially smoky).
Hope that explains it well enough. By the way, I have always loved how you can see the layering of air moving in low (cool & clear) and exiting high (warm/hot & initially smoky).
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