How to hook this stove up to my chimney?

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xpauliber

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Jan 29, 2013
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I'm removing this woodstove from my basement and I have a free-standing woodburner that I want to install. I'm going to get the existing flue checked for cracks but I am wondering how I should hook up the new woodburner to my existing chimney. The new woodstove has a 6" round exhaust opening but as you can see from the pics, the existing flue is a rectangular clay and the existing stove looks like it just slid in there and never was fully sealed to the flue. Is there some type of adapter that I can buy or should I run a liner the whole way up the existing flue?

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You will need to run a new Stainless liner all the way to the top.
 
First of all, the pix don't enlarge, so I'm not sure you uploaded them correctly. in answer to your question, it's best to run a liner from an appliance adapter all the way to the cap. A block off plate is advisable, as well. You may need to insulate the liner, depending on what the chimney inspection reveals...
 
We don't need to know any more about the old insert you're removing. We need to see pics of the fireplace empty, and we need to know all about the stove you're intending to install. Rick
 
Welcome to the forums, xpaul. :)
Looks like a lot of water was coming down that chimney.
Running a full-length liner is always preferable; Better draft, easier to sweep the chimney, safer, etc. But you should have a tall chimney and plenty of draft from the basement....may want to install a key damper in the pipe if you re-line.
BTW, have you got dry wood? I mean super-dry, like split and stacked in the wind for at least a year (two for Oak.)
we need to know all about the stove you're intending to install.
Yeah, whatcha got?
 
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Thank you guys for all of the replies! I have an older woodstove that I got off of a neighbor. I'm going to buy a new Hearthstone or Jotul but I don't have the green for one right now. Hopefully in the next year or two.

With that being said, I think I'm just going to re-line the chimney now and be done with it for good so no matter what stove I go with down the road, the chimney will be golden.

What is the best liner kit to get and where should I buy it?
 
Thank you guys for all of the replies! I have an older woodstove that I got off of a neighbor. I'm going to buy a new Hearthstone or Jotul but I don't have the green for one right now. Hopefully in the next year or two.

With that being said, I think I'm just going to re-line the chimney now and be done with it for good so no matter what stove I go with down the road, the chimney will be golden.

What is the best liner kit to get and where should I buy it?

If you can't afford a new stove right now then you probably can't afford a liner.
 
?? I don't agree. There is a big gap between $400 for a liner and $1400 for a stove and liner. But expauliber, there will be the additional hassle at figuring out how the heck to connect that stove to the liner. It was designed as a slammer with no connection to the chimney. This is illegal now. The damper rod on the outlet is a complication that will require notching the rect. to round flue adapter.
 
If you can't afford a new stove right now then you probably can't afford a liner.

I just stopped at a local place that sells stoves & liners this afternoon and they had stainless steel liner kits that are supposed to be good for a lifetime for $395 and most of the stoves were $2,500 and up. That's quite a difference.

Begreen: I apologize for the confusion. I mislabeled this thread and tried to change the title after I re-read it but I couldn't. I'm not trying to attach the stove in the pictures..that's the stove I removed. I didn't list pictures of the stove I'm putting in but it just has a round 6" outlet.
 
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That's what I understood and tried to address in post #4. Tell us about the stove you're wanting to install...pictures would really help a lot. Rick
 
yep, we need to see what you are seeing.
 
Getting the liner is a good place to start if that's all you can afford right now, too many people want to short cut that part.
 
Beefy, Is this a coal stove or it that the overdrive lever on the left side? ==c Is the flue exit 6"?

If so a liner with a capped tee on the end with a short connector (pitched uphill toward the chimney) should do the job.
 
What are those things on the back? This thing is obviously not going fit under your lintel, so is the hearth deep enough to support it? Do you know anything about this stove you want to install?
 
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Definitely. see above.
 
Ohh, you beat me too it! Thats what I get for looking at 2 things at once!
 
this is what I get what I get when looking at 2 things at once.

Cross eyed man.jpg
 
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Haha. You guys are cracking me up.

I got this stove off of a neighbor for $25. He was going to scrap it.

It has a 6" exhaust and my hearth is big enough to support it. I'm in central-PA, the heart of coal country but I don't want to burn coal. Can I install this and just burn wood in it?
 
I don't think so. It is a hopper fed coal stove. I would fix it up and sell it.
 
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