Hi all, so I am planning on installing a new wood stove to vent up through a liner in an existing masonry chimney on an exterior wall. The main problem, however, is that the stove needs a 6" diameter liner, but the interior dimensions of the chimney are only 4.75" x 18.25". Doing the math tells me there's way more than enough volume so with my simple understanding of this concept I assume it should be possible to get the correctly shaped liner up this chimney and still have a good draft. Unfortunately I don't really know exactly what that looks like. Do I just go for some kind of oval liner, even though I understand those are fairly expensive? I had an idea of possibly using a fitting down by the stove that is essentially a Y that changes the 6" opening to 2 4" openings which is about the right volume, and then sort of having a "double-barrel" liner going up the chimney. Any idea if this has this been done and if it would cause problems with the draft? Complicating matters quite a bit even more so is the fact that as far as I can tell the existing chimney is unlined. Any help here?
![[Hearth.com] How to fit a liner in a too small chimney [Hearth.com] How to fit a liner in a too small chimney](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/165/165503-02fc23735658cc640259ca59b7ea37ad.jpg?hash=2Wpp38Z7Jd)
![[Hearth.com] How to fit a liner in a too small chimney [Hearth.com] How to fit a liner in a too small chimney](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/165/165504-51cbda40c904115d2b1e17a1e497a7cc.jpg?hash=7iWOpYro12)
![[Hearth.com] How to fit a liner in a too small chimney [Hearth.com] How to fit a liner in a too small chimney](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/165/165505-0855cc80d655a1b3345a4a6f36c3f6ad.jpg?hash=_1NaedjwVE)

![[Hearth.com] How to fit a liner in a too small chimney [Hearth.com] How to fit a liner in a too small chimney](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/165/165506-51b2d0bd4bde48b54d7762a5c93bf43a.jpg?hash=gnoWtVgAA-)