A hood's a pretty big investment for a beginning home chemist.
Then perhaps the entire procedure is not meant for the home user? Perhaps it's worthwile, to start small, under a professional instrtor's supervision, in a university lab environment? In particular:
I know water boils at 100c but I wanted to speed things up so I set it at 250c.
No. You don't do that. Ever. It is not justifiable. At all. Ever. A careful, cautious person, who wants quality results, never does that. Heck. If you want to cook dinner, any recipe will tell you, put the heat on medium, or medium high, and monitor the process, reducing the heat when the process seems to be running away from you. Yeah, you can make ramen noodles on high, and burn half of them into the walls of the pot. But that's not how a chemist works.
'Tho I do have to admit, I am pretty proud of
newbiedummy: for starting out with water and not dangerous reagents. Doing a dry run is a pretty impressive insight, as "basement bombers" go. Please spend more time reading your text, before you try this again, and try to find a laboratory text, or a children's book of chemistry. Wherever the children's book of chemistry says, "Get an adult." you should take that tio mean, step back, metaphorically, and say "What can go wrong, right here, right now." and formulate a plan.
Yeah I figured 800ml in a 1000ml flask was probably too much but I was kind of seeing how long it would take to boil.
Likewise, when I started chemistry, not overfilling a flask was the first thing taught to me. People who insisted they should do whatever they felt like in the lab got thrown out, physically if necessicary. And probable devoted their mind power to law, or politics, instead.