I know there have been many threads on this subject of liners but I am adding another. In this one there were interesting points raised https://www.hearth.com/talk/threads/42235/
but I want to throw my question in as well. I am getting closer to actually getting a stove and feel I will have to order my liner as well, and plan my install.
I have a one story brick masonry house that would require about a 15' liner to direct connect (it's 17'3" from top to bottom actually but I figure you subtract a little for the actual stove. The house was built in 1953 and the INTERIOR chimney about 3/4 to one side of the house is all masonry with clay tile liner for the top 10 feet, and it is large clay tile liner, about 11" square. I asked the local stove dealer that gave me a pricequote on a stove to give me a price on liner and install, just wanted to see what all that would be. He quoted me about $1500 for liner and install and said that $760 of that was for the liner alone, UNinsulated, I believe. He basically indicated that it's a waste to insulate the liner on an interior chimney. When I asked if it wouldn't improve the draft he seemed to assume my chimney was in awful condition and kinda steered away from that part of the conversation.
So my questions are again
1) Is it crucial for safety and to make the stove operate at it's best to insulate even a liner on an interior chimney? And worth the expense and trouble?
2) I was thinking of having a handyman friend do the install because he has tools and common sense BUT no experience with woodstoves or the like. Would a 6" liner end up swimming in a 11" flue and would that be a bad thing if it's touching various sides and etc on it's way down? Or should it be centered and is there a good way to do that?
I DO want to do this safely and do it right. It seems the most experienced (and expensive) professionals in town feel insulating the liner an unnecessary expense. Does anyone here concur or no? Thanks in advance for the advice. I am off to find my liner quote! (I believe it will be 6" this time)
but I want to throw my question in as well. I am getting closer to actually getting a stove and feel I will have to order my liner as well, and plan my install.
I have a one story brick masonry house that would require about a 15' liner to direct connect (it's 17'3" from top to bottom actually but I figure you subtract a little for the actual stove. The house was built in 1953 and the INTERIOR chimney about 3/4 to one side of the house is all masonry with clay tile liner for the top 10 feet, and it is large clay tile liner, about 11" square. I asked the local stove dealer that gave me a pricequote on a stove to give me a price on liner and install, just wanted to see what all that would be. He quoted me about $1500 for liner and install and said that $760 of that was for the liner alone, UNinsulated, I believe. He basically indicated that it's a waste to insulate the liner on an interior chimney. When I asked if it wouldn't improve the draft he seemed to assume my chimney was in awful condition and kinda steered away from that part of the conversation.
So my questions are again
1) Is it crucial for safety and to make the stove operate at it's best to insulate even a liner on an interior chimney? And worth the expense and trouble?
2) I was thinking of having a handyman friend do the install because he has tools and common sense BUT no experience with woodstoves or the like. Would a 6" liner end up swimming in a 11" flue and would that be a bad thing if it's touching various sides and etc on it's way down? Or should it be centered and is there a good way to do that?
I DO want to do this safely and do it right. It seems the most experienced (and expensive) professionals in town feel insulating the liner an unnecessary expense. Does anyone here concur or no? Thanks in advance for the advice. I am off to find my liner quote! (I believe it will be 6" this time)