- Jul 19, 2012
- 10
If I need to clean it, why couldn't I just take the chimney down and clean it every few years? It doesn't seem like it would be all that hard to do that? So, what do you think?.......LOL!!
In answering questions: My basement is finished in 1950s tongue and groove knotty pine. It is my family room where I spend most of my time watching TV. I thought I could get the heat upstairs through the registers. I have been using a kerosene heater the past twenty years and I would put it at the bottom of the basement steps and the heat always went up the stairs and about half way back through the house. My house is not that big. I could also turn the furnace (only) fan on and circulate the heat through the house.
I would rather not cut a hole through the cement wall foundation wall. I would have to cut through the pine wall and if I ever decided to take the stove out, I would have to plug the 6 inch hole in the top of the wall. And there is not that much room between the aluminum siding and the ground. Plus there is no where to go out that would work all that well. So, I would rather go out of the window. I would probably still have to zig zag around the objects whether I cut a hole in the wall or not.
The wood I have is a mixture of wood- oak, maple and sycamore that is one to two years old. I also have a lot of large (2 inch) lilac and honeysuckle limbs to burn. Plus, this past March, I cut down a 60 year old Honeylocust tree in the yard. It is cut and stacked, but I have not split it yet. So, I probably have at least one+ cords of wood that I could burn right now. I could burn at least one of them before I get to the Honeylocust if it isn't ready to burn by December. I have so many trees in my yard, I give away about a cord of wood every year to people. They burn it. I just can't see not using it myself somehow.
I would hate to put the stove upstairs on the main floor and run the chimney through the house. I just put a new roof on the house a couple of years ago and I don't want to punch a hole in my new roof. Again, if I decide to go without the stove after a few years, then I'd have a chimney and a hole through my roof. And I really don't have an appropriate wall to put the chimney in front of.
I won't mind taking wood downstairs. I had a fireplace in another home years ago and it was in the basement. The heat went upstairs there with no problems.
I like the wood stoves that they have at Menard's. They run around $600- $1000.00 for the free standing ones. I wouldn't really want one that big. I just put in a new electric furnace a couple of years ago, so I just thought the wood stove would help heat the house and keep my basement/family room warm. I mainly just want one because I have so much free wood every year and I am tired of giving it away.
I don't want it upstairs on the main floor. I'd have to drag wood through the house and drop it all over the carpeting and that would be a nasty mess.
Great stuff and if I can add one more detail, stove in basement is gonna need air for complete combustion. Most basements are pretty air tight, I feel you would need an OAK or a window cracked to accomplish.Good idea about talking with a few stove shops and installers. There are some details that need clarification. Having professional eyes-on-site evaluation would be helpful and prudent. Some concerns I would have for example are:
* The exterior hole through the metal will need to be 12" for a 6" stove pipe due to the insulation on the class A tee and required 2" clearances. 6" is the pipe ID, 8" is the OD. How tall is the basement window? Is there adequate total clearance?
*The interior connecting pipe will need to be double wall and have at least 8" clearance from the ceiling.
*The clean out at the bottom of the tee will be virtually inaccessible due to the below grade location.
* The overall height will be on the low side, when combined with the 2 90 deg turns and basement location. It may make the stove balky to start and/or spill smoke when the door is opened. This will be worse if there is negative pressure there.
*Check with a local electrician about the clearances needed from the chimney to the incoming electrical power strike at the roof peak.
*If the stove location is in a place with a lot of nearby wood, you may want a stove with close clearances. Some cheaper stoves lack rear and side shielding as standard.
* How large is the stove room and does it have direct access to the basement stairway? If not, the room may overheat easily.
Is there any option to put the stove on the opposite side of the basement to get around the window issue and proximity to the electrical strike?
If you look at the basement window on the left, it has an exhaust fan in it. So, there should not be any air problems.Great stuff and if I can add one more detail, stove in basement is gonna need air for complete combustion. Most basements are pretty air tight, I feel you would need an OAK or a window cracked to accomplish.
No, The rear and the other end of the house is unfinished and closed off with the walls from the family room. The heat would never get through to the rest of the house.Jim, is there an option to locate the stove on the opposite side of the basement?
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