I bought that set up last year and used it on an 8 day Idaho backcountry hunt and absolutely loved it.
A few things we learned quickly, a little gap at the bottom of the sawtooth helps airflow and keeps condensation from getting bad if you don’t have the liner (seems like you’d want it tight against the ground, but we got pretty bad condensation that way). Set the low side into the wind and Use a trekking pole for the rear support because it’s easy to adjust and you can make it nice and taught, inevitably it will get kicked in the night. We had high winds several times with zero issue. Take your time to find a spot that is nice and flat and realize the footprint is bigger than it seems.
Keep your gear organized and it makes life easier. We also pre built the fire every night so that when we woke up in the dark all we had to do was light the pyro putty and keep the door cracked and then listen to the wood burn until it was warm and then we’d get up and get dressed.
Be sure that when you assemble the stove you do so with gloves (Kifaru provides a pair with their stoves). It helps to have two hands when assembling the stove and pipe. We took our time to ensure it was put together snugly (not over tight) just snug and burned it in the first time with a couple of hot fires. It seemed to keep its shape better when we moved camp and was easier to assemble the second time. The only snafu we had was the little steel rings that hold the stovepipe together come with a little piece of paracord and we didn’t realize one of the rings was right in the exit port of the tent and that piece of high viz paracord got pushed against the stovepipe and melted. Not a huge deal, but thank god it didn’t start a fire, be nice of they used something resistant to heat for that.
For cutting wood we measured the stove (stuck the saw to the back) and noted the length our wood needed to be and then cut everything an inch or two shorter than that. Smaller dryer stuff burns up quick, but a good bed of coals and some bigger rounds with the stove dampened down will last a bit longer and throw some amazing heat. Be sure you don’t put anything (sleeping bag, blow up pillow, sleeping pad, etc) directly in front of the door because the fire will inevitably pop and throw some burning embers out.
I can’t wait to use my set up again this year. Game changer.