I'm getting a new flue installed for a wood boiler in the basement into a chase that already has flues for an oil burner and a first floor insert. When the oil flue is totally cold the draft tends to reverse and I believe some smoke comes down to smell up the basement a bit. The insert flue terminates below and upwind of the oil's, and the other cold day I could see a drifting vapor plume and how it could happen. So, I'm getting the chimney guy to try and do something about it, which I think could include the three flues terminating increasingly higher in the prevailing upwind direction. Am I on the right track. (PS: I'm still tickled that he can fit another flue in there.) I'm including a pic of what it looks like now. Wind flow is approximately from left to right. Waddya think?
![[Hearth.com] Termination Heights of Multiple Flues in a Chase [Hearth.com] Termination Heights of Multiple Flues in a Chase](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/127/127342-a2d09442f30887b98067a1957a0622bf.jpg?hash=zxZ0s390ZL)
![[Hearth.com] Termination Heights of Multiple Flues in a Chase [Hearth.com] Termination Heights of Multiple Flues in a Chase](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/127/127342-a2d09442f30887b98067a1957a0622bf.jpg?hash=zxZ0s390ZL)