Finally finished installing my stove. I did pretty much everything myself (built the hearth pad, cut hole in ceiling, installed the chimney, installed the flue, etc). I moved the stove around the room by jacking it up onto small dollies, and got it into final position up on the hearth pad by sticking a greased double layer of 2x10s under it, jacking up, and sliding down into place (greased with my wife's Crisco shortening!). I think if I did that again I would put some ski's under the stove first. It didn't exactly slide right down the greased boards like I had hoped, but a little rockin' and nudgin' got the job done.
The hearth pad was as simple as I could make it while still meeting code (exceeding actually). Its just one layer of micore 300 sandwiched with thinset between two layers of Durock (one layer of durock would have been adequate). Then I added the tile layer, nothing fancy, just big square 1 foot tiles. I have never done any tiling before and I'm not very artistic. If I actually knew what I was doing ahead of time I would have made the dimensions such that the tiles hung over the top edges to avoid all the grouting around the edges and corners, but hey, it didn't turn out so bad. The pad is mobile enough to slide around over the carpet (with effort) when there is nothing on top of it.
The hardest part was putting in the chimney box though the roof - and the work from the roof itself was horrendous mostly because it was like 130 degrees up there (got up at 5:30AM that day hoping to be done before it got too hot - WRONG). Framing and nailing in the box was such a pain, so little room to work, you don't know how many times I hammered my own fingers
I still have not lit a fire in it yet, that's not going to happen during this heat wave!
Here also is a picture of the beginnings of my wood pile. Can you spot the hog? What is the difference between a ground hog and a wood chuck?
Yes, I have no idea what I'm doing when it comes to stacking wood either...
Full details about my venture into wood stoves can be found on my web page (in signature)
The hearth pad was as simple as I could make it while still meeting code (exceeding actually). Its just one layer of micore 300 sandwiched with thinset between two layers of Durock (one layer of durock would have been adequate). Then I added the tile layer, nothing fancy, just big square 1 foot tiles. I have never done any tiling before and I'm not very artistic. If I actually knew what I was doing ahead of time I would have made the dimensions such that the tiles hung over the top edges to avoid all the grouting around the edges and corners, but hey, it didn't turn out so bad. The pad is mobile enough to slide around over the carpet (with effort) when there is nothing on top of it.
The hardest part was putting in the chimney box though the roof - and the work from the roof itself was horrendous mostly because it was like 130 degrees up there (got up at 5:30AM that day hoping to be done before it got too hot - WRONG). Framing and nailing in the box was such a pain, so little room to work, you don't know how many times I hammered my own fingers
I still have not lit a fire in it yet, that's not going to happen during this heat wave!
Here also is a picture of the beginnings of my wood pile. Can you spot the hog? What is the difference between a ground hog and a wood chuck?
Yes, I have no idea what I'm doing when it comes to stacking wood either...
Full details about my venture into wood stoves can be found on my web page (in signature)