No, I'm traveling now for a week with no pictures yet . Single burner, pig shape, top slides to the left. Six windows in the front door, 28 embossed behind the chimney, probably 30 inches tall. I need the screen and plastic sheet for the windows.Does it look like this?
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Thanks for your help Rick. One more please, I'm hearing pig stove when asking the locals. How is a stove size determined? Front to back of the inside of the box or top to bottom of the interior?Yeah, I don't know anything about your stove, but helped my cousin restore a different old stove that had the mica windows. He was able to buy some sheets from an eBay vendor and trim them to fit. I've heard of other folks actually retrofitting modern pyroceram into old stoves, but that's much more expensive, as each pane must be custom cut by a commercial supplier, then the stove has to be modified to accommodate them. I'd definitely find some mica if I were doing it. The screens should be easy enough to make from a fine mesh stainless steel hardware cloth. Rick
Understood, you know your smoke. Thanks again RIck.The bulk of the heat this thing is going to provide is going to be from radiation and natural convection from the appliance itself, not the flue pipe. Straight up through the roof is cheaper, more efficient, and easier to keep clean. The single-wall stove pipe you can run from the flue collar to the ceiling support box will give off some (minimal) additional heat. As soon as you penetrate the structure (either straight up or out and up), you must use Class A chimney components (including whatever you choose for penetrating the ceiling/roof, or wall), which are a good deal more expensive than single-wall stove pipe. Ideally ($$$-wise), you'd route the flue to minimize the Class A requirements, and that almost invariably means straight up is your best bang for the buck. Whatever heat you might think you're gaining by having lots of stovepipe wandering around inside will be more than offset by the cost of a lot of Class A chimney to go up outside the wall and the nightmare of trying to keep that thing clean and safe to operate. Rick
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