This would be a follow up to my first post a few weeks back wondering about upgrading my old Hurricane burner with a modern stove. I bought an old 1910 Victorian church the prior owner fixed up and turned the empty huge attic into 3 bedrooms and a bath, but most of the work was not built to any code. The Drolet Myriad III is arriving tomorrow after a long slow freight from Indiana. I have been taking in the advice I got here regarding whether to use my old 8" Class A chimney with the new stove which has a 6" flu outlet and Drolet is recommending a 6" chimney with max of 7". I think Begreen might be right that my old 8" metalbestos class A is likely 30+ years old and has a lower UL rating of 1700 than current standard of 2100.
Here is picture of my label for verification and maybe someone here recognizes this old pipe.
The chimney goes through a hidden closet exposed with no chase that had carpeting right up to and touching the base of the class A pipe on top of the ceiling support box. After I pulled up the carpet, I saw it was full of densely packed yellow fiberglass insulation. I cleaned out all the insulation that was stuffed into the ceiling support box in direct contact with the class A chimney, some of it was charred black. The chimney goes straight up through the drywalled ceiling that had some direct contact with the chimney at one point and and had more stuffed insulation in contact with the chimney. I pulled it all out and also cut out the drywall out so there is a 2" clearance from drywall to the chimney. There was no sign of an attic insulation shield, so I pulled back more insulation that was in the 6" joist space under the roof sheathing. It looked like the roof hole and flashing was OK with a very tiny gap of light looking up. We have no County building codes here, except for state of Colorado plumbing and electrical, so people do what they want seems to be how things go.
At this point, I am pretty sure I am going to be changing out my whole chimney system for a new 6" class A chimney and a double wall stove pipe. It is very hard to find any kind of help here, but I did locate a chimney sweep and installer who is CSIA certified from an hour away and have arranged to have an inspection and estimate done on next Monday. I am betting I cannot afford their price for them to do all the work and supply materials, but I will try and get good advice on my situation and how to proceed. One of my concerns is if the current stove location is good or maybe I should move the new stove to another location and run the chimney through a chase in the interior of the 2nd floor and closer to the very tall roof peak that is even a steeper pitch than where the chimney is now.
I will likely just keep getting by for now with my current old stove and chimney and do this in summer when things are warm and dry. I am hoping I can reuse the current hole in my roof as it is, but that will be one of my questions for the inspection as maybe I need to fill in the hole to go from a 8" class A pipe to 6" class A? I am thinking the large flashing might fill the hole good enough and then maybe I need to recut some new shingles to fit tight around the roof flashing? The roof is a 12/12 pitch with traditional asphalt shingles and the chimney is near a corner gable of the hip roof maybe 16 ft from the ground. I will need some protection due to roof pitch and have some ideas to make a 2X6 large frame to temporarily screw onto roof to be able to work from and also use a safety harness/belay. I would have a carpenter help me as well. Just glad the old place has not burned down yet in spite of everything I have described. Thanks for any help!
Here is what the back of home looks like where the chimney is located:
And the front just for fun:
Here is picture of my label for verification and maybe someone here recognizes this old pipe.
The chimney goes through a hidden closet exposed with no chase that had carpeting right up to and touching the base of the class A pipe on top of the ceiling support box. After I pulled up the carpet, I saw it was full of densely packed yellow fiberglass insulation. I cleaned out all the insulation that was stuffed into the ceiling support box in direct contact with the class A chimney, some of it was charred black. The chimney goes straight up through the drywalled ceiling that had some direct contact with the chimney at one point and and had more stuffed insulation in contact with the chimney. I pulled it all out and also cut out the drywall out so there is a 2" clearance from drywall to the chimney. There was no sign of an attic insulation shield, so I pulled back more insulation that was in the 6" joist space under the roof sheathing. It looked like the roof hole and flashing was OK with a very tiny gap of light looking up. We have no County building codes here, except for state of Colorado plumbing and electrical, so people do what they want seems to be how things go.
At this point, I am pretty sure I am going to be changing out my whole chimney system for a new 6" class A chimney and a double wall stove pipe. It is very hard to find any kind of help here, but I did locate a chimney sweep and installer who is CSIA certified from an hour away and have arranged to have an inspection and estimate done on next Monday. I am betting I cannot afford their price for them to do all the work and supply materials, but I will try and get good advice on my situation and how to proceed. One of my concerns is if the current stove location is good or maybe I should move the new stove to another location and run the chimney through a chase in the interior of the 2nd floor and closer to the very tall roof peak that is even a steeper pitch than where the chimney is now.
I will likely just keep getting by for now with my current old stove and chimney and do this in summer when things are warm and dry. I am hoping I can reuse the current hole in my roof as it is, but that will be one of my questions for the inspection as maybe I need to fill in the hole to go from a 8" class A pipe to 6" class A? I am thinking the large flashing might fill the hole good enough and then maybe I need to recut some new shingles to fit tight around the roof flashing? The roof is a 12/12 pitch with traditional asphalt shingles and the chimney is near a corner gable of the hip roof maybe 16 ft from the ground. I will need some protection due to roof pitch and have some ideas to make a 2X6 large frame to temporarily screw onto roof to be able to work from and also use a safety harness/belay. I would have a carpenter help me as well. Just glad the old place has not burned down yet in spite of everything I have described. Thanks for any help!
Here is what the back of home looks like where the chimney is located:
And the front just for fun: