Hello, I am hoping some others here might share what they have done. I've been burning 5 yrs. Burning is my primary source of heat for the winter months of Michigan.
I have had a work in progress for several years now. Below is what I did over a period of time.
I have fireplace exterior masonry chimney. I gut the fireplace throat damper and cleaned the flue, smoke chamber and fireplace. I added a woodstove insert with a stainless steel liner. The liner goes to the top of the chimney. I poured vermiculite insulation between the liner and interior of the chimney.
Then installed the chimney liner cap.
I also insulated the brick of the fireplace walls. Finally, I placed sheet metal above the woodstove where the existing fireplace throat damper used to be. (Out of sight). The sheet metal lays horizontal sealing off the smoke chamber.
Since I have did the various insulation upgrades the woodstove performance immediately increased.
However, here is my dilema. Inside the smoke chamber it gets ridiculously hot. Since the heat radiated from the liner has no place to go. So to correct this I placed a Marvin window fan above the woodstove blowing airbags into the room. Adding the fan to the top of the wood stove greatly increased the efficency.
I burn half the amount of wood I used to prior to the upgrades.
Does anyone else have a better solution to get the excessive heat out of the smoke chamber? I don't like having the woodstove with out the surround.
I have had a work in progress for several years now. Below is what I did over a period of time.
I have fireplace exterior masonry chimney. I gut the fireplace throat damper and cleaned the flue, smoke chamber and fireplace. I added a woodstove insert with a stainless steel liner. The liner goes to the top of the chimney. I poured vermiculite insulation between the liner and interior of the chimney.
Then installed the chimney liner cap.
I also insulated the brick of the fireplace walls. Finally, I placed sheet metal above the woodstove where the existing fireplace throat damper used to be. (Out of sight). The sheet metal lays horizontal sealing off the smoke chamber.
Since I have did the various insulation upgrades the woodstove performance immediately increased.
However, here is my dilema. Inside the smoke chamber it gets ridiculously hot. Since the heat radiated from the liner has no place to go. So to correct this I placed a Marvin window fan above the woodstove blowing airbags into the room. Adding the fan to the top of the wood stove greatly increased the efficency.
I burn half the amount of wood I used to prior to the upgrades.
Does anyone else have a better solution to get the excessive heat out of the smoke chamber? I don't like having the woodstove with out the surround.