Here is the situation that I’m faced with: I have an interior chimney that previously had a wood circulator (Suburban Woodmaster) and a wood cook stove (Knox Mealmaster) connected to it on opposite sides. Both appliances are on the ground floor, and the thimble for the circulator is about a foot or two lower in the chimney than the one for the cook stove. The old liner was 8x8 masonry, but badly cracked and has since been broken off to make room for a 6” stainless steel liner. Now, the plan is to eventually replace the cook stove with a modern one (like a Heco) that is better suited to both space heating and cooking and then remove the circulator entirely, leaving the new flue with just the cook stove. However, that’s not going to happen immediately. So, given this situation, I am wondering which is the least bad option in the interim: set up the chimney for just the old cook stove, remove the circulator, and have just the old cook stove for heat and cooking, or have both the circulator and the old cook stove attached to the same flue temporarily and only ever have one running at once.
Now, I know it’s a code violation to have two appliances connected to the same flue, and presumably a 6” flue couldn’t be big enough to accommodate multiple appliances anyway. That said, is it possible to have these two appliances connected to the same flue and it be safe (if not code-compliant) for the moment if I only ever run one at a time? On the other hand, if it just isn't an option to have both connected at once, how miserable can I expect to be with just an older cook stove for heat? (for reference, the house is a 1200 square foot central passage style, with the chimney located in the center of the rooms on the right side of the central hall)
Now, I know it’s a code violation to have two appliances connected to the same flue, and presumably a 6” flue couldn’t be big enough to accommodate multiple appliances anyway. That said, is it possible to have these two appliances connected to the same flue and it be safe (if not code-compliant) for the moment if I only ever run one at a time? On the other hand, if it just isn't an option to have both connected at once, how miserable can I expect to be with just an older cook stove for heat? (for reference, the house is a 1200 square foot central passage style, with the chimney located in the center of the rooms on the right side of the central hall)