My wife and I have a Pacific Energy Anderlea T5 stove. The stove pipe is double wall. Last year, when we replaced our old stove, we had to fix a water leak in the pipe. A technician replaced the cap, which was apparently the problem. He also reduced the pipe length by one section, as the draft was a bit too much for this stove. Now, when the stove is cold, we sometimes get a smoke smell in the house.
We've been careful to crack a window in a bathroom when running a fan and it happens even when no fans are running. Most often, we notice it first thing in the morning. Then it dissipates during the day. So it seems to be related to the cooler temperatures that night brings. Rainy days may make it more likely too but I'm not 100 percent sure of that, as there hasn't been much rain since this issue began. It seems to be worse right now, in the warm season.
One of the things the tech did when he replaced the cap was he taped closed some air vents in the pipe right near the roof line. The vents are covered by a sort of visor. He covered them just to be sure water wasn't getting in there. I'm wondering if those openings might be needed to prevent air from flowing back down the pipe under certain conditions. Or maybe it's unrelated and we just have the wrong cap.
I've posted some photos of the stove pipe and the area near the roof line. I appreciate feedback from anyone who has experience with this issue.
We've been careful to crack a window in a bathroom when running a fan and it happens even when no fans are running. Most often, we notice it first thing in the morning. Then it dissipates during the day. So it seems to be related to the cooler temperatures that night brings. Rainy days may make it more likely too but I'm not 100 percent sure of that, as there hasn't been much rain since this issue began. It seems to be worse right now, in the warm season.
One of the things the tech did when he replaced the cap was he taped closed some air vents in the pipe right near the roof line. The vents are covered by a sort of visor. He covered them just to be sure water wasn't getting in there. I'm wondering if those openings might be needed to prevent air from flowing back down the pipe under certain conditions. Or maybe it's unrelated and we just have the wrong cap.
I've posted some photos of the stove pipe and the area near the roof line. I appreciate feedback from anyone who has experience with this issue.