- Oct 16, 2006
- 7
Hi There,
Thanks Craigi, KD, and Better Safe than Sorry.
I will try to find out more answers but this is what I have. This is a zero clearance (before the woodstove was installed). It had glass front doors which were removed for the wood stove. And yes, the back of it is some sort of ceramic/brick-looking material. The piece they installed over the crack (and the install of the plate completely covered the back of the zero clearance which included the crack) was 1/4” steel plate. (I thought it was iron but it’s not.) And yes, we had fires in it for 15 or more years with no problem except inefficient heating. They say the pipe (original) was triple wall because where we live I think that was code. I think the smell was the insulation. We put 3 cords of wood through this last year and the smell would get worse when the stove got hotter. My husband thought the insulation was what was smelling. Why would they have put that in there at all? Oh, and KD mentioned a wooden framed chimney to go with the zero clearance and that is what this is (masonry on the outside). And KD, this woodstove is attached to the triple wall pipe and sealed off. There is no additional liner but do we still need it if the pipe is triple walled?
The “guys” who put it in were the installers so we originally presumed the insulation was supposed to be in there. And please don’t worry about sounding sarcastic. You absolutely did not. We can’t get straight answers unless you have adequate information. This helps me to be more concise.
And “Better Safe Than Sorry” - I don’t know the manufacturer but will try to find out to see if it is compatible with the stove. What would make one woodstove compatible and not another?
You have all been very gracious to help and I’m interested in your further feedback. Thank you so much.
OregonCountry
Thanks Craigi, KD, and Better Safe than Sorry.
I will try to find out more answers but this is what I have. This is a zero clearance (before the woodstove was installed). It had glass front doors which were removed for the wood stove. And yes, the back of it is some sort of ceramic/brick-looking material. The piece they installed over the crack (and the install of the plate completely covered the back of the zero clearance which included the crack) was 1/4” steel plate. (I thought it was iron but it’s not.) And yes, we had fires in it for 15 or more years with no problem except inefficient heating. They say the pipe (original) was triple wall because where we live I think that was code. I think the smell was the insulation. We put 3 cords of wood through this last year and the smell would get worse when the stove got hotter. My husband thought the insulation was what was smelling. Why would they have put that in there at all? Oh, and KD mentioned a wooden framed chimney to go with the zero clearance and that is what this is (masonry on the outside). And KD, this woodstove is attached to the triple wall pipe and sealed off. There is no additional liner but do we still need it if the pipe is triple walled?
The “guys” who put it in were the installers so we originally presumed the insulation was supposed to be in there. And please don’t worry about sounding sarcastic. You absolutely did not. We can’t get straight answers unless you have adequate information. This helps me to be more concise.
And “Better Safe Than Sorry” - I don’t know the manufacturer but will try to find out to see if it is compatible with the stove. What would make one woodstove compatible and not another?
You have all been very gracious to help and I’m interested in your further feedback. Thank you so much.
OregonCountry