i was always under the impression that in stainless liners your suppose to use poly only. but if thats the case i would maybe pick up a steel brush. maybe someone else will chime in that knows.crappie cat said:OK. I was concerned about the "scratching" that may occur with steel agin steel. I don't wanna slow the flow none what so ever.
Hogwildz said:This is yet another dead horse. Many will swear to use a poly, other are loyal to steel. As far as manufacturers requirements, I can only speak for the liner I use, Duravent, and I called the tech and he said steel is fine.
Looks like another popcorn kinda night. Use whichever you prefer, and git the job done.
Realstone said:I may be re-inventing the wheel, but has anyone tried attaching the brush to a high torque, low rpm drill to maximize cleaning?
Good tip, thanks. Haven't got my stove yet, but it will be one that burns hot & clean. The pipe run will be completely vertical, ~17' in height and I will clean it according to a timetable that folks here recommend, so I don't anticipate too much buildup. But I digress, I'm hijacking this thread :bug:pen said:If you needed to scrub it that hard w/ a brush, there is something terribly wrong going on with the burn.
Lots of people use a product called a "soot eater" which uses "whips" and spins while cleaning and attaches to a drill.
pen
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