Solo Stove Smokeless Fire Pits can burn at temperatures above 800 degrees. Please use Solo Stoves in outdoor environments only.
Best Tips for Lighting Your Smokeless Fire Pit
You’re only a few simple steps away from starting a roaring fire in your Solo Stove.
What you will need:
3 fire starters. A long-nosed lighter or long matchstick. Kindling or firewood cut into thinner pieces Firewood
Solo Stove Yukon Smokeless Fire-pit lighting instructions:
Step 1: Ensure the Yukon is placed on a level surface. Flip the flame ring to where the lip faces upwards.
Note: Your ring will arrive in the position seen in A above, place it back this way for storage and travel. Be sure to flip the fame ring before use, as doing so ensures oxygen flow through upper vent holes. (formatting as a notepad pin maybe)
Step 2: To begin, create a rectangle at the bottom of the fire pit. Place one of the fire starters in the center.
Step 3: Then place two more fire starters on either end of the center rectangle and add another thin piece of firewood overtop of the center fire starter.
Step 4: Then, begin to create a pyramid over the center piece of firewood, laying the smaller pieces of firewood over the center piece.
Step 5: Once the pyramid is assembled, light your firestarters.
Step 6: Once the firestarters are lit, give the smaller wood some time to catch and develop an ember bed before adding any larger wood pieces.
Step 7: Finally, go ahead and add in your larger firewood pieces, taking care to not add too many, which may suffocate the fire.
With the SoloStove pellet adapter, you can get a roaring fire going with wood pellets in no time. Simply load a bag of wood pellets into the pellet adapter, place a firestarter on top, and light the firestarter to get your pellet fire going.
Frequently Asked Questions:
Q: Why is my fire smoking inside my SoloStove?
A: Often times fire can smoke inside a SoloStove due to a few reasons such as wood not being fully dried or the wood being stuffed too tightly and choking out the fire, preventing it from burning hot enough due to a lack of oxygen flow.
Q: Why is my fire not lighting?
A: Some issues may prevent the fire from lighting, the most common being the firestarter or wood being too wet or damp.