So I have been lurking on here for a few months researching and trying to figure out what stove to buy and how to install it. I have a plan together and will put some pictures up, please let me know if there are any issues with my plan you may see in pics or my plan.
We bought our first house in central CT this summer and I would like to install a wood stove insert. House is 1900 ft not including the basement, the downstairs is pretty open with basicly three rooms.
The fireplace currently has a gas log insert in it now, will be removing that shortly. My fireplace dimensions can be seen in one of the pictures.
I would like to fit in an osburn 2400 but I think it is just a smige to big. I am now looking at the century CW2900 as it seems like a good bang for buck, and a large insert that will fit. I would like to go bigger but I haven't found a bigger stove that will fit my insert.
I am thinking I will be getting the duraflex single wall 35' liner kit from northern tool for 400. In the instructions it says that you need to verify that the existing masonry chimney has at least 1” clearance from exterior of the chimney to combustibles. I am confused by this statement, the chimney runs right up along side my house, which technically is combustible, am I missing something, does there need to be a gap? Also does this type of chimney liner need to be insulated?
I am thinking installation generally goes from top down. I plan on insulating right under the cap of the chimney with some roxul insulation. Then at the bottom of the chimney having a blocker plate with again some roxul behind it and hi temp silicon around the liner and blocker plate. Since the chimeny is external, I am also planning on insulating the fireplace before I put the insert in with roxul. What is a good way to attach the roxul?
So from what I understand, next I pull the liner down into the fireplace. Are the liners flexible enough to squeeze through the damper or do I need to remove/grind a hole in the damper?
Next I would slide the insert in and attach the liner, do I silicon this joint as well to seal it? The rest of the installation looks pretty straight forward, blower and faceplate.
Are there any key things I am missing?
anything to be sure to do/not to do?
Any difficulties that you think I may run into based on the pictures of my fireplace?
As far as saftey, what are things to be sure to do/check?
We bought our first house in central CT this summer and I would like to install a wood stove insert. House is 1900 ft not including the basement, the downstairs is pretty open with basicly three rooms.
The fireplace currently has a gas log insert in it now, will be removing that shortly. My fireplace dimensions can be seen in one of the pictures.
I would like to fit in an osburn 2400 but I think it is just a smige to big. I am now looking at the century CW2900 as it seems like a good bang for buck, and a large insert that will fit. I would like to go bigger but I haven't found a bigger stove that will fit my insert.
- Do you have any opinions on the CW2900?, I havent found many reviews of it on here
- is there another insert with a larger capacity that will fit in my fireplace, I would like an insert I can load up before work or bed and not have to light again when I get home or wake up.
I am thinking I will be getting the duraflex single wall 35' liner kit from northern tool for 400. In the instructions it says that you need to verify that the existing masonry chimney has at least 1” clearance from exterior of the chimney to combustibles. I am confused by this statement, the chimney runs right up along side my house, which technically is combustible, am I missing something, does there need to be a gap? Also does this type of chimney liner need to be insulated?
I am thinking installation generally goes from top down. I plan on insulating right under the cap of the chimney with some roxul insulation. Then at the bottom of the chimney having a blocker plate with again some roxul behind it and hi temp silicon around the liner and blocker plate. Since the chimeny is external, I am also planning on insulating the fireplace before I put the insert in with roxul. What is a good way to attach the roxul?
So from what I understand, next I pull the liner down into the fireplace. Are the liners flexible enough to squeeze through the damper or do I need to remove/grind a hole in the damper?
Next I would slide the insert in and attach the liner, do I silicon this joint as well to seal it? The rest of the installation looks pretty straight forward, blower and faceplate.
Are there any key things I am missing?
anything to be sure to do/not to do?
Any difficulties that you think I may run into based on the pictures of my fireplace?
As far as saftey, what are things to be sure to do/check?