We are into a winter storm tonight complete with wind blown snow. Temps are supposed to dip into the teens then possibly single digits all with winds persisting.
I was on the roof on New Year's day and there was some crusties on the cap but nothing excessive and no blockage (too tall to see down into the liner). Draft has always seemed fine but with wind but I have a concern that with the combination of low temps and wind the smoke will condense on the cap. Am I over thinking?
I was on the roof on New Year's day and there was some crusties on the cap but nothing excessive and no blockage (too tall to see down into the liner). Draft has always seemed fine but with wind but I have a concern that with the combination of low temps and wind the smoke will condense on the cap. Am I over thinking?

).
. As for your flakes better your lawn than in the stove. When I was on the roof looking at the cap the stove was on and running clean. I was smacking the cap and poking my finger in the slots to see how loose the buildup was. A few little crunchies fell in, and all of a sudden the whole thing starts smoking and I thought; what you are doing is really dumb, if the chimney is a little dirty you're gonna set the whole thing off. This was from the smallest amount of creosote you can imagine, much less than a gram. I can only imagine what some of these stack fires look like.

