A woodstove can never meet code in a garage in the USA regardlessFor the wall near the wood stove in my garage I put up 1/2 inch drywall but it seems code is for 5/8, can I add 1/8 of plaster on top, or another layer of 1/2, or should I just add a layer of 5/8 over existing 1/2?
Interesting. How about a detached pole barn, that may or may not have a car in it at some point in it's life?A woodstove can never meet code in a garage in the USA regardless
I also added a metal shield with spacers to the side of the stove. I think the firebox is more than 12 inches off the floor, the stove feet are on 8 inch cinder blocks.For a wood stove installation, you need Type X 5/8-inch fire-rated drywall, often used in multiple layers or with a heat shield (like metal/cement board with an air gap) to meet safety codes,
This, an old Kodiak. Sounds like my best bet is to add a metal shield with spacers to the walls.an unlisted old stove.
Can those gaps be larger than 1 inch? Since the stove is 14 inches off the floor and is only about 2 ft tall does the shield need to go from floor to ceiling, minus the 1 inch gaps, or can it be less?that can be cut to 1 ft using an approved heat shield spaced 1" of the wall and with a 1" gap at the bottom and open at the top
Stove only has a small baffle, and the fan isn't very powerful.I would not point the fan to the pipe unless you don't have a baffle in the stove (i.e. you're pushing too much heat up the pipe).
Yes that is a consideration.Then, your insurance may not pay out of something happens with the garage if you have a stove there. Just be aware ..
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