I bought a home with two wood fireplaces, and realized pretty quickly they are almost unusable with smoke filling my house. After a bit of research, I think the main issue is the chimney pipes they used:
![[Hearth.com] How to fix draw issues - is it this exposed non-insulated chimney? [Hearth.com] How to fix draw issues - is it this exposed non-insulated chimney?](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/307/307358-9efc3d71d4166bb1a116607475ad33c4.jpg?hash=v1_ZpiwQMu)
The middle chimney is the main floor fireplace, located one floor down. It's a straight shot to the fireplace below.
So far, I've tried making the fireplace opening (51" x 24") slightly smaller. This seems to have helped quite a bit, but I'm thinking the main issue is the chimney pipe being non-insulated (it's very hot to the touch with a fire going).
Am I on the right track here? Could I replace that stack with an insulated chimney pipe like DuraVent to help with the smoke draw?
![[Hearth.com] How to fix draw issues - is it this exposed non-insulated chimney? [Hearth.com] How to fix draw issues - is it this exposed non-insulated chimney?](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/307/307358-9efc3d71d4166bb1a116607475ad33c4.jpg?hash=v1_ZpiwQMu)
The middle chimney is the main floor fireplace, located one floor down. It's a straight shot to the fireplace below.
So far, I've tried making the fireplace opening (51" x 24") slightly smaller. This seems to have helped quite a bit, but I'm thinking the main issue is the chimney pipe being non-insulated (it's very hot to the touch with a fire going).
Am I on the right track here? Could I replace that stack with an insulated chimney pipe like DuraVent to help with the smoke draw?