.
The installation of this appliance must comply with all local regulations, including those referring to
national and European Standards before it can be operated. The stove is not suitable for a shared flue.
Improper adjustment, alteration, maintenance or the fitting of replacement parts not recommended
by the manufacturer can cause injury or property damage. Do not operate the stove with faulty seals or
damaged glass.
Ensure all manuals are kept safely and are available for the user at all times.
Do not store or use petrol or other flammable vapours and liquids in the vicinity of this or any other
heating appliance. Do not burn anything but natural wood or approved coals on this appliance.
Due to the high operating temperatures of this appliance it should be located away from pedestrian
traffic and away from furniture and draperies. Do not store paper or wood near the appliance. Any mats
and rugs put in front of the stove should be fire proof and secured to prevent the possibility of tripping.
Advise all persons as to the stove’s high surface temperatures, including visitors. If it is possible for
children or infirm adults to come into contact with the stove, fit a suitable fire guard. Never let children
“help” with the stove in anyway, even when the stove is cold.
It is imperative that all air passageways into, out of, and within the appliance are kept clean. All permanent ventilation into the room provided for the stove must remain clear and unobstructed at all
times. Consideration must be given to the need for extra ventilation if another heating source needing
air is to be operated simultaneously. If an extraction fan is proposed to be fitted to a connecting area
of the house after the stove has been installed, professional advice should sought from a qualified
engineer.
If a flue blockage or adverse weather conditions cause the stove to emit smoke, do not treat it as merely a nuisance, this smoke will indicate that carbon monoxide is being emitted into the room. Turn
the stove to its minimum firing rate, open windows and allow the stove’s fuel to burn out before closing
the windows. Do not re-light the stove without consulting a qualified engineer.
In the event of a chimney fire the stove should be turned to its minimum setting and the fire brigade
informed. Do not re-light the stove until the complete installation has been inspected by a qualified
engineer.
The appliance should be inspected regularly, see installation guide for boiler cleaning information, and
the chimney cleaned at least annually. More frequent cleaning may be required and the advice of a
qualified chimney sweep should be sought. Always check for any flue blockage before lighting the stove
after a prolonged shut down.
Harmony 1 with 3kW boiler and Harmony 3 with 11kW boiler.
We would recommend that after the first weeks of use the cast iron top plate is removed and that the
accumulation of soots is monitered, then after two weeks it is inspected again. This will allow you
to gauge the frequency that the boiler will need to be cleaned, see the installation guide for boiler
cleaning information.
This stove has been carefully designed and constructed to give clean burning with optimum efficiency and safety,
but as with all stoves these standards will not be achieved unless the stove is installed and maintained regularly
by qualified engineers. It must also be operated strictly with the procedures given in this manual.
If you are unsure about anything concerning your stove please seek professional advice.
Thank you for purchasing your stove and helping to protect our environment. Nestor Martin and Euroheat insist
on progressive development to produce products which are market leading. Our aims are to produce stoves with
the latest innovations, user friendly operation and highly efficient for lower cost operation. When burning wood
you will be greatly assisting with reducing CO2 to the environment when compared to coal oil or gas.
This operation manual offers user information for the range of HARMONY 1 and HARMONY 3 Boiler stoves.
In some cases you find references in this document to the model size rather than the models exterior design.
There are two sizes of appliances Harmony 1 and Harmony 3. Although the exterior cloths change between
model change, the internal workings are the same. The Harmony 1 and Harmony 3 are multifuel models.
Model Identification
You will see on the front page of this document a label which confirms which model you have. This label also
advises you of the stoves unique serial number. This information is also attached to your stove for reference.
Warranty
Thank you for choosing a Euroheat/Nestor Martin stove. It has been constructed with the utmost care and with
the finest materials; we hope it gives you many years of pleasurable warmth. Any modification to the appliance,
or the fitting of non approved parts, will cancel any warranty and may make it unsafe.
Details of the warranty can be found on the Euroheat web site www.euroheat.co.uk
Important
Warranty Registration
Please ensure this is fully completed by your installing engineer with details of your approved Euroheat supplier
and returned to Euroheat within 28 days of installation. In this way the model and its history will be recorded
for reference in the future.
Euroheat & Nestor Martin have a policy of continual research and development and reserve the right to modify its
appliances without prior notice. We make every effort to ensure that the information provided in this document
is correct and accurate at the time of printing, but continued updates occur to adapt documents to appliance
changes and customer feedback. For the latest editions of all Euroheat documentation visit our web site www.
euroheat.co.uk.
We would welcome any comments or information which you feel is not provided in this document which would
assist other users in the future. E-mail tech@euroheat.co.uk
Whilst we are always happy to assist you, please make sure you have read this manual before contacting the
technical support team.
Technical support telephone number 01885 491117. E-mail tech@euroheat.co.uk
Useful organisations
Solid Fuel Association 0845 601 4406 www.solidfuel.co.uk
The National Association of Chimney Sweeps 01785 811732 www.chimneyworks.co.uk
Gas and oil are consistent fuels and stoves can be designed to obtain the maximum heat from them with the
user having to do no more than choose a heat setting. Solid fuels are almost infinitely variable and however well
a stove has been designed, its performance will ultimately depend on the way the user operates it. Whilst we
have endeavoured to make the stove as simple to operate as possible, understanding just a little about the fuels
and the way your stove was designed to burn them will be rewarded by you being able to achieve the best from
your stove with the least effort.
As a fuel, wood is visually exciting, environmentally friendly, and a renewable source of energy but it is one of
the most complex fuels to burn. Wood contains two sorts of components which burn. The fixed carbons which
burn as the glowing embers, and the compounds that vaporize when heated to burn as volatile gasses, giving
the endlessly changing flame patterns. The fixed carbon, which is charcoal, is a virtually trouble free fuel and
needs little assistance to burn cleanly, but it would be difficult to describe it as visually entertaining.
When set to its wood burning position, your stove heats the incoming air. The air is supplied as slowly as possible
so as not to blow out any established flames. By placing a log or two towards the front of the fire whenever the
flames from previous logs die down, a bed of charcoal will build up. This will be virtually pure carbon and capable
of burning for incredibly long periods without causing any tar deposits.
Always put logs on to the fire before flames from previous logs have extinguished, this will ensure that when the
new logs begin releasing gasses it will ignite. Unburned gasses will cause smoke and tar deposits and wastes
potential heat. Putting on too much wood at one time will both restrict the air supply and cool the combustion
chamber making it more difficult for the gasses to burn cleanly.
Never put on fresh wood whilst operating the stove with a minuscule air supply as a technique for operating
for long periods without attention, it will cause both chilling and air restriction. Properly controlling the rate at
which wood burns is not simply a matter of restricting the air supply, nor running the stove with a very small
fire, it is maintaining the temperature and ignition flames in the stove whilst balancing the release of gasses to
match the chosen air supply.
No two woods have the same burning characteristics but all wood contains water. It is difficult to quantify the
amount of water any log might hold whilst its exterior feels dry but it would not be unreasonable to estimate a
mug full from a good sized, poorly seasoned log. Imagine pouring that onto your fire every time you introduce
a new log and you will realize its obvious effect of cooling the fire. What is not so obvious is that the moisture
mixing with the vaporized gasses is cooling them, possibly below their ignition temperature. So the water within
a wet log cooled the stove, it has prevented much of the potential heat from the log being realized and the
unburned combustible products will be deposited as tars within the stove and flue.
Coal suitable for stoves has only a very small proportion of components that vaporise and a far higher fixed carbon
content and when the stove is set to its coal burning position air is supplied through the grate to the underside of
the fire bed to supply the carbon directly. There will be sufficient spare air travelling through the fire bed to reach
the limited gasses being released and this air will have been heated as it passed the burning coals.
Because coals suitable for stoves have so little vaporizing content they are virtually trouble free fuels to use, but
if you are using one of the manufactured smokeless coals take care to ensure the ash pan is checked regularly
because some of them have a very high ash content; this is especially important if you change “brands” because
the ash contents can vary dramatically.
Always riddle the grate before putting on loadings of coal to give the initial release of gasses sufficient air with
which to burn; failure to do so may allow the stove and flue to fill with gasses ready to ignite.
A stove is very much safer than an open fire, but if you have children or infirm people in the house please ensure
it is suitably guarded, and consideration should also be given to accidental contact with the stove if you are
entertaining with a busy house full of guests.
All wood will burn slightly differently, but the most
important differences between woods is their moisture
content. Until the moisture has been driven off from the
wood it will remain below its combustion temperature.
When the outer skin has dried and beginning to burn, much
of this heat energy will be wasted having to boil off the
water remaining in the core of the wood. Copious amounts
of water vapour, in all but the most insulated flue, will
condense, and mix with the products of combustion to form
creosote and other undesirable substances which will eat
away the fabric of the flue, and eventually build up to block
the flue. At any time this build up of tar will be capable of
causing a chimney fire.
The advice to burn only "dry" wood is sometimes confusing because the atmospheric moisture will prevent
wood ever becoming "dry". It is acceptable to burn wood with a moisture content of less than 20%, which can
be achieved by splitting the wood, stacking it so as to allow air to circulate within the stack and storing it under
cover for between 18 months and 30 months, depending on prevailing climatic conditions. The use of a wood
moisture content meter will confirm the amount of water remaining in the wood easily.
Smokeless Coal
We recommend burning deep mined anthracite, a natural hard coal which is classified as being a smokeless
fuel; specifying the sizes of “small nuts” or “large nuts” (preferably large nuts) will give most visually attractive
and efficient burning. Smaller sizes than this will tend to choke the air flow too easily making long burning
times without attention problematic. Various manufactured smokeless coals are available giving differing burning
characteristics and the manufacturers or your coal merchant will advise you as to their suitability for stoves.
House Coal
The difficulties and dangers associated with burning ordinary bituminous coal
(house coal) with its relatively high volatile content make it totally unsuitable
and potentially dangerous for burning in any stove.
Lignite (also known as solid mineral fuel)
Lignite is obtainable in briquette form and is best described as young coal. It
behaves very much like coal and should be burned as smokeless manufactured
coal. However it is not classified as a smokeless coal.
Peat
Peat burns very well, but it is bulky and its distinct aroma will pervade your home and everything in it, but
otherwise peat can be burned as wood.
DO NOT BURN petroleum based fuels such as petro-coke, they may seriously
damage your stove. The manufacturers of other blended coal products, containing
a proportion of petro-coke, should be approached to confirm the suitability of
the product for use within an enclosed appliance that does not have a chrome
steel grate. Most manufactured coal contains some petroleum based coke
ingredients. Before burning them please confirm there suitability with the coal
manufacturer.
Never burn wood that is not dry or wood that has been subject to a manufacturing process, such as chipboard,
as these contain resins of uncertain toxicity when burned. For the same reasons, wood that has been painted or
treated with a preservative should never be burned.
Natural wood is described as being either “hardwood” or “soft wood”. Typically all broad leaf trees that lose their
leaves in the winter are called hard woods, and the evergreen conifers are called soft woods. Whilst the wood
from the two groups have structural differences the terms do not define the density or hardness of the wood.
Balsa, one of the softest and lightest of woods is classified as being a hardwood and Hemlock, a soft wood, is
extremely hard.
The less density wood has, the more its structure is made up of open spaces meaning it will season faster and
because of these voids it will burn faster because it will expose more surface area as it disintegrates. This makes
light woods suitable for kindling or a rapidly developing fire but unless you enjoy putting wood onto a fire every
few minutes it is unsuitable for burning over long periods. Although there is a difference in the speed at which
woods burn, equal weights of wood will give very similar amounts of heat.
Because logs are concentric tubes of cells they season faster if they are split, halving the tubes and allowing the
moisture to evaporate more easily. Similarly it also allows the volatile gasses given off when the wood is heated
in a stove to be emitted along its full length rather than at the log’s ends. This helps the gasses to be distributed
more evenly within the stove and improves not only the efficiency, and emission reduction of wood burning but
gives a more attractive fire.
Putting logs onto the fire, bark side down and laying them, well spaced, in random orientation, rather than
uniformly horizontally, will also help to increase the efficiency and attractiveness of the fire. To make this easier
the ideal log length will be the length the stove’s combustion chamber can accommodate in all directions, and
of proportionate cross-section, to allow you to load wood in a “higgledy-piggledy” manner.
LOG SIZES. All logs should be split and ideally, quartered.
Anything but dry, natural wood. Wood that has been painted, treated or has hinges, nails or any plastic attached
will almost certainly emit toxic matter when burned. For similar reasons bonded wood products such a chipboard,
plywood or fibre board must never be burned.
DO NOT BURN
Household waste. Many seemingly innocuous items like box packaging have been coated with glazes which will
produce toxic matter when burned. One old video tape put on the fire will cause more pollution in a few minutes
than a life time of wood burning. Not only will a fire burning rubbish pollute, the stove is not designed to contain
such an assortment of sizes and weights and a flaming box falling from the stove when the door is opened will
present an unacceptable fire hazard.
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