Creosote Remover?

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moterhead3

New Member
Oct 13, 2007
54
Bethel Twp PA
Do any of you use spray on creosote remover? I've used it when I burned my fireplace and it seemed to work. Do you think it will help during this weather when I'm burning small fires.
 
Anyone ever heard of throwing rock salt in a fire for creosote? I have seen it clean the firebrick in a fireplace but have no idea what it does up the flue. Ive always just swept.
 
An old guy I knew in upstate PA told me about that years ago. Used it with a huge fire in my fireplace and the spray on stuff and I had a spotless flue. Don't think I'd use salt with a steel stove though.
 
How about those logs that LOWES sell that supposely rids of creosote?
 
Probably some, if not most of them out there work to some degree to help break down the creosote. They are still not a substitute for regular maintenance, cleaning and inspection of what's going on in the chimney, as well as regular good wood burning habits.
 
I throw in some TSP a couple times a week. It seems to help some I think and it is cheap.
 
N6CRV said:
I throw in some TSP a couple times a week. It seems to help some I think and it is cheap.

Yeah that is the main ingredient in most of the powders and sprays. What nobody has a fix on is the effect it has on these stainless liners over time.
 
Dont use salt to clean creosote in a steel or cast iron stove or with black stove pipe.

While salt will indeed clean the creosote, it has a corrosive and rusting effect on the steel and cast iron of both the stove and the black sheet metal stove pipes and will case premature rust out. So,it is a bad idea, an especially bad idea if you have a cat stove, as it will mess up your catalitic converter.

tri sodium phosphate , seems to be what everyone is using & recommending, & I hear it is only $3.00 for a 2 lb tub.
 
Webmaster said:
Most folks who use it, and even some chimney sweeps, agree that it works to some degree. Over a long period of time, it seems to change some of the harder creosote to a more easily removed flakier stuff.

Is the flaky stuff you're referring to soft, easily comes off by rubbing your finger on it? Is this considered a "better" creosote simply because it's easy to remove, or is it less flammable or something?
 
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