So I finished re-doing a fireplace-to-wood stove replacement comlete with exhaust through a stainless steel pipe via. a masonry chimney at my parents cottage in the past few weeks. Two weeks ago I put the stainless stovepipe through the collar onto the stove, screwed it in, and put a bead of thermal silicone around the joint. I also adhered the rain-cap flashing and chimney pipe rain-cap to the top of masonry chimney with a thick bead of thermal silicone as per installation instructions.
My father waited until I left to go home 3 hours later and promptly lit a stove despite me telling him that the caulking had a cure time of 24-48 hours. I grumbled at him about it and asked him not to do that again. I got back up this weekend, and put the finishing touches on the stovepipe's rain-cap and put a bead of thermal silicone around it's joint with the flashing cap (I only had 1/2 inch overlap between the two instead of the 1-1/2 as per instruction, and was worried about capillary action pulling the moisture back up the joint). My father waited until I left and promptly lit "a small fire to burn off the paper and scrap wood".
Any guesses if I should strip the system down and re-do the caulking? Two fires that might have lasted 15 minutes each and had no hardwood to 'ratchet the temperature up', but I'm worried that the integrity of the caulking might be comprimised.
Thks in advance.
My father waited until I left to go home 3 hours later and promptly lit a stove despite me telling him that the caulking had a cure time of 24-48 hours. I grumbled at him about it and asked him not to do that again. I got back up this weekend, and put the finishing touches on the stovepipe's rain-cap and put a bead of thermal silicone around it's joint with the flashing cap (I only had 1/2 inch overlap between the two instead of the 1-1/2 as per instruction, and was worried about capillary action pulling the moisture back up the joint). My father waited until I left and promptly lit "a small fire to burn off the paper and scrap wood".
Any guesses if I should strip the system down and re-do the caulking? Two fires that might have lasted 15 minutes each and had no hardwood to 'ratchet the temperature up', but I'm worried that the integrity of the caulking might be comprimised.
Thks in advance.