Just wondering how many of you do this yourself, or pay to have it done.
Last winter was my first year with a wood stove, and I am trying to decide weather or not to pay to have the guy who installed the chimney come out for the cleaning, or if I should just use the money to go ahead and buy the stuff myself to do it. My setup is pretty simple I guess, and should make for a rather quick job.
From the top of my stove, the stove pipe goes up 2', makes a 90* turn to the back wall, enters the class A pipe where it passes through a wall thimble and exits the house. It then connects to a T connector that has a clean-out on the bottom, and then goes up 12' or so to a cap. The roof isn't very high up, or even that hard to get onto for that matter. I can easily step up from a 6' step ladder setup on my deck, and be on the roof. I figure it would be pretty simple with the correct brush and rods to push down through the pipe to the clean-out.
My confusion comes in with the pipe going through the wall, and the actual stove pipe. I would guess that I would have to remove the stove pipe, take it outside and brush that out? Also would I just pass the brush through the pipe that goes through the wall?
Then comes the equipment. Am I correct in my understanding that I will need one of the poly brushes for use in my SS chimney? Also since the run is straight, would I be better off with rigid rods, and then just one flex type rod to use for brushing out the stove pipe that has the 90 in it? Also, is chimney cleaning usually done dry, or do you have to apply some sort of cleaning solution prior to the actual brushing.
Or, should I just pay to have it done, watch the guy do it, and then just do it myself next year???
Last winter was my first year with a wood stove, and I am trying to decide weather or not to pay to have the guy who installed the chimney come out for the cleaning, or if I should just use the money to go ahead and buy the stuff myself to do it. My setup is pretty simple I guess, and should make for a rather quick job.
From the top of my stove, the stove pipe goes up 2', makes a 90* turn to the back wall, enters the class A pipe where it passes through a wall thimble and exits the house. It then connects to a T connector that has a clean-out on the bottom, and then goes up 12' or so to a cap. The roof isn't very high up, or even that hard to get onto for that matter. I can easily step up from a 6' step ladder setup on my deck, and be on the roof. I figure it would be pretty simple with the correct brush and rods to push down through the pipe to the clean-out.
My confusion comes in with the pipe going through the wall, and the actual stove pipe. I would guess that I would have to remove the stove pipe, take it outside and brush that out? Also would I just pass the brush through the pipe that goes through the wall?
Then comes the equipment. Am I correct in my understanding that I will need one of the poly brushes for use in my SS chimney? Also since the run is straight, would I be better off with rigid rods, and then just one flex type rod to use for brushing out the stove pipe that has the 90 in it? Also, is chimney cleaning usually done dry, or do you have to apply some sort of cleaning solution prior to the actual brushing.
Or, should I just pay to have it done, watch the guy do it, and then just do it myself next year???