Well, as they say, every journey begins with the first step and that must apply to installing a wood boiler too.
Here is the concrete work I did last weekend. I'm putting Excel insulated chimney pipe horizontally through the wall and then vertically up the sheet rocked wall that you can see inside the garage.
In the basement I will have about 7.5 inches of clearance between my dwsp and my floor joists. The insulated pipe that will go through the wall has about 6 inches of clearance from the pressure treated wood you see on top of the sill. The vertical Excel should have about 4-5 inches from the inside of the chase once it is built.
In one of those pics it looks like there is some kind of PVC tube, but that's just an item sitting in the garage.
My next step is to pour a 3 sided concrete form that I will sink down into the hole in the garage with the open side facing the basement foundation. The form will be about 3 inches wide on all sides. The form will allow me to dig down without dirt falling into the hole and weakening the garage floor. By digging down, I will have space for my cleanout-T. The form will be about 3 inches above the garage floor to keep melted snow etc, from the cars from ever running into the hole. The form will also serve as the foundation for my chase.
I'm going to put up a lot of images of this project for your feedback. Everything I know about boilers I've pretty much learned here so, I appreciate your feedback.
EDIT: Forgot to add that there is concrete behind the sheet rock you see in the garage. I'm going to remove just a bit of that to give about 4 inches of clearance between horizontal Excel pipe and the sheetrock.
Here is the concrete work I did last weekend. I'm putting Excel insulated chimney pipe horizontally through the wall and then vertically up the sheet rocked wall that you can see inside the garage.
In the basement I will have about 7.5 inches of clearance between my dwsp and my floor joists. The insulated pipe that will go through the wall has about 6 inches of clearance from the pressure treated wood you see on top of the sill. The vertical Excel should have about 4-5 inches from the inside of the chase once it is built.
In one of those pics it looks like there is some kind of PVC tube, but that's just an item sitting in the garage.
My next step is to pour a 3 sided concrete form that I will sink down into the hole in the garage with the open side facing the basement foundation. The form will be about 3 inches wide on all sides. The form will allow me to dig down without dirt falling into the hole and weakening the garage floor. By digging down, I will have space for my cleanout-T. The form will be about 3 inches above the garage floor to keep melted snow etc, from the cars from ever running into the hole. The form will also serve as the foundation for my chase.
I'm going to put up a lot of images of this project for your feedback. Everything I know about boilers I've pretty much learned here so, I appreciate your feedback.
EDIT: Forgot to add that there is concrete behind the sheet rock you see in the garage. I'm going to remove just a bit of that to give about 4 inches of clearance between horizontal Excel pipe and the sheetrock.
![[Hearth.com] Wood Boiler Project - Chimney Phase [Hearth.com] Wood Boiler Project - Chimney Phase](/talk/proxy.php?image=http%3A%2F%2Fi.imgur.com%2FYxp8e.jpg&hash=3a8e3d54e67a7630fda816877a286228)
![[Hearth.com] Wood Boiler Project - Chimney Phase [Hearth.com] Wood Boiler Project - Chimney Phase](/talk/proxy.php?image=http%3A%2F%2Fi.imgur.com%2Fsz5wQ.jpg&hash=e36e95a45abff0cfa1acde3607ecb74f)
![[Hearth.com] Wood Boiler Project - Chimney Phase [Hearth.com] Wood Boiler Project - Chimney Phase](/talk/proxy.php?image=http%3A%2F%2Fi.imgur.com%2FKPnlL.jpg&hash=c799e86f90db53e8294046bcacb13e4f)
![[Hearth.com] Wood Boiler Project - Chimney Phase [Hearth.com] Wood Boiler Project - Chimney Phase](/talk/proxy.php?image=http%3A%2F%2Fi.imgur.com%2FsPsYr.jpg&hash=4cda91ddc431b7de767693631720b1dd)