hey all I've recently bought a new to me house (1830's) that has 3 very tall chimneys, the house is a cape.
anyways 2 of the chimneys are unused and the one that is used is a code violation as it has the furnace and woodstove hooked up to it and its a single flue. I would like to run a stainless liner down one of the other chimneys and hook the furnace up to it but the one I have in mind is a little funky, all it has in the basement is a cleanout door and no room to install a thimble is it acceptable to come through the cleanout door with the liner and then add a "T" for a cleanout? I also was wondering if I needed an insulated liner or not, the chimney is in respectable shape and I would think the masonry and tile inside would insulate it enough that it shouldn't be an issue, not to mention this is a furnace not a woodstove so creosote shouldn't be a anywhere near as much of an issue. on the other hand Maine winters can get pretty cold but any input would be appreciated thanks.
anyways 2 of the chimneys are unused and the one that is used is a code violation as it has the furnace and woodstove hooked up to it and its a single flue. I would like to run a stainless liner down one of the other chimneys and hook the furnace up to it but the one I have in mind is a little funky, all it has in the basement is a cleanout door and no room to install a thimble is it acceptable to come through the cleanout door with the liner and then add a "T" for a cleanout? I also was wondering if I needed an insulated liner or not, the chimney is in respectable shape and I would think the masonry and tile inside would insulate it enough that it shouldn't be an issue, not to mention this is a furnace not a woodstove so creosote shouldn't be a anywhere near as much of an issue. on the other hand Maine winters can get pretty cold but any input would be appreciated thanks.