I have a few questions that I've searched the forums for answers to numerous times, and can't seem to find answers relevant to my case, so I'd appreciate any help .
Background:
I have an old house (1880) that has a straight down flue-less chimney with zero bends, and the interior dimensions of the chimney are approximately 18"x18" which will make a rigid liner install pretty easy. I'm new to woodburning and just bought a used jotul 100 woodstove. I repointed the brick at the top of the chimney that I had access too and added some more courses of brick to reach the 3' above the roofline code requirement. I'm planning to get a rigid liner, since it's a straight shot, but not sure whether to get a single or double lined for a few reasons that are unique to my situation. The stove will sit inside the fireplace (which is only 13" deep) a couple inches from the back wall of it (stove vents vertically)
Single-wall pro/cons for my specific situation:
- Since pipe is cheaper
- Since I would need insulation with single liner, I can get pour-in insulation like thermix to insulate the pipe, which will fill in all of the voids around the liner in the chimney. This I think would be important for me because what I've read, the pour-in insulation adds *some* structural integrity to the chimney and should get between bricks to help lock the brick together, which is very old with I'm sure a lot of deteriorated mortar joints. I have read and know that something like Supaflu would be the best option for dealing with the structural re-inforcement of the old brick, but it is out of my budget (less than $1000), and can only afford the materials and will do the install myself. I'm planning to go with Simpson duraliner single or double wall, and simpson DVL stove pipe for the interior pipe
Double-line pros/cons:
- Double lined would be a lot quicker to install
- I like the fact there's 2 rigid metal walls for safety sake
- concerned that with no pour-in insulation around the double-wall chimney, the space in the chimney around the new liner would heat up to a point where it would cause the old bricks in the chimney to possible expand/contract and cause structural damage (or worst case scenario collapse). I don't have any way of getting access to the chimney to repoint any brick prior to the new liner install, so I basically have to work with what's there.
I guess the big questions I have are:
1) does pour-in insulation really get solid and add some integrity to the chimney, or does it still stay kind of loose
2) how much protection to the old chimney would a single-wall rigid liner + pour-in insulation solution provide against chimney fires, etc versus a double-walled rigid chimney liner solution? In a perfect world with unlimited money, I would get the double-walled liner for saftey + pour-in insulation for chimney reinforcement/additional insulation, but I just don't have the budget for it.
3) Are there any issue putting the stove inside the fireplace a couple inches from the back wall of the chimney (which was originally used ot burn open fires)? I know there's clearances to combustible materials to take into consideration, but is there any typical clearance requirements to non-combutibles materials (fireplace walls) for the stoves?
Thanks in advance!
Background:
I have an old house (1880) that has a straight down flue-less chimney with zero bends, and the interior dimensions of the chimney are approximately 18"x18" which will make a rigid liner install pretty easy. I'm new to woodburning and just bought a used jotul 100 woodstove. I repointed the brick at the top of the chimney that I had access too and added some more courses of brick to reach the 3' above the roofline code requirement. I'm planning to get a rigid liner, since it's a straight shot, but not sure whether to get a single or double lined for a few reasons that are unique to my situation. The stove will sit inside the fireplace (which is only 13" deep) a couple inches from the back wall of it (stove vents vertically)
Single-wall pro/cons for my specific situation:
- Since pipe is cheaper
- Since I would need insulation with single liner, I can get pour-in insulation like thermix to insulate the pipe, which will fill in all of the voids around the liner in the chimney. This I think would be important for me because what I've read, the pour-in insulation adds *some* structural integrity to the chimney and should get between bricks to help lock the brick together, which is very old with I'm sure a lot of deteriorated mortar joints. I have read and know that something like Supaflu would be the best option for dealing with the structural re-inforcement of the old brick, but it is out of my budget (less than $1000), and can only afford the materials and will do the install myself. I'm planning to go with Simpson duraliner single or double wall, and simpson DVL stove pipe for the interior pipe
Double-line pros/cons:
- Double lined would be a lot quicker to install
- I like the fact there's 2 rigid metal walls for safety sake
- concerned that with no pour-in insulation around the double-wall chimney, the space in the chimney around the new liner would heat up to a point where it would cause the old bricks in the chimney to possible expand/contract and cause structural damage (or worst case scenario collapse). I don't have any way of getting access to the chimney to repoint any brick prior to the new liner install, so I basically have to work with what's there.
I guess the big questions I have are:
1) does pour-in insulation really get solid and add some integrity to the chimney, or does it still stay kind of loose
2) how much protection to the old chimney would a single-wall rigid liner + pour-in insulation solution provide against chimney fires, etc versus a double-walled rigid chimney liner solution? In a perfect world with unlimited money, I would get the double-walled liner for saftey + pour-in insulation for chimney reinforcement/additional insulation, but I just don't have the budget for it.
3) Are there any issue putting the stove inside the fireplace a couple inches from the back wall of the chimney (which was originally used ot burn open fires)? I know there's clearances to combustible materials to take into consideration, but is there any typical clearance requirements to non-combutibles materials (fireplace walls) for the stoves?
Thanks in advance!