Hello, first post here. I have been running a professionally installed Lopi Liberty wood stove for about 12 winters now. The stove is located in the main room of the house with a cathedral ceiling about 26' high at the peak. The chimney goes straight up to the peak, taking only a greater than 90 degree turn to avoid a roof beam. I try to burn only seasoned hardwoods (mainly oak this year). When my first husband died in 2017, one of the first things I did was to have the chimney professionally cleaned and inspected; the inspector found no issues. We had never had a chimney cap fire prior to then.
Fast forward to yesterday (and a couple times since I remarried). Yeah, it happened. Scared the hell out of me, but I do have a steel roof and there is snow on the ground so we were safe. My husband went up and pulled the cap afterwards and threw it on the ground. It looks like a lot of creosote had built up right at the cap. For now we're running it without the cap, no chance of any wildlife etc getting in there for now. But, this is not the first time this has happened, and I would not like it to happen again. My husband does clean the chimney 1-2x a year, but somehow we're getting creosote building up at the cap.
My husband is the main wood stove tender and I appreciate that, but he has this annoying habit of closing the damper at night, or even any time he gets a good fire going during the day. There is a magnetic thermometer on the stove pipe, and I was always taught to keep the fire going at 300 degrees F or so. When he closes the damper, of course it runs cooler than that. And he pushes logs in there side by side, so I think air flow is restricted.
Could the burning at cooler temperatures be contributing to creosote buildup at the cap? Could throwing in wood that still literally has snow on it have any effect? Trying to win an argument here. Any other tips for preventing creosote buildup at the cap?
Fast forward to yesterday (and a couple times since I remarried). Yeah, it happened. Scared the hell out of me, but I do have a steel roof and there is snow on the ground so we were safe. My husband went up and pulled the cap afterwards and threw it on the ground. It looks like a lot of creosote had built up right at the cap. For now we're running it without the cap, no chance of any wildlife etc getting in there for now. But, this is not the first time this has happened, and I would not like it to happen again. My husband does clean the chimney 1-2x a year, but somehow we're getting creosote building up at the cap.
My husband is the main wood stove tender and I appreciate that, but he has this annoying habit of closing the damper at night, or even any time he gets a good fire going during the day. There is a magnetic thermometer on the stove pipe, and I was always taught to keep the fire going at 300 degrees F or so. When he closes the damper, of course it runs cooler than that. And he pushes logs in there side by side, so I think air flow is restricted.
Could the burning at cooler temperatures be contributing to creosote buildup at the cap? Could throwing in wood that still literally has snow on it have any effect? Trying to win an argument here. Any other tips for preventing creosote buildup at the cap?