I heat my 1200 foot bungalow with a Quadrafire Castile pellet insert 24/7. I bought a Morso 1410 nearly a year ago. This was to be a supplemental heat source at the opposite end of the house, but the project sputtered when I saw the price for installing a quality chimney pipe.
I finally ordered my Dura-Vent chimney pipe yesterday, but am concerned about it being tall enough. I'm concerned that I won't get enough draft for an EPA rated stove. The house is definitely not airtight. I have a very low slope to my roof, and the chimney will be running through a wall thimble. It will also need to make an offset to avoid the peak of the roof and allow a place to attach the wall straps.
The manufacturer recommends a 16 foot chimney, although it is not required. I have ordered enough chimney pipe to be 15 feet above the stove outlet. The roof is only 8 feet above the stove outlet. This leaves 7 feet above the roof. I know I need to use a brace at 5 feet above the roof. I am concerned that I won't have enough draft at this height. If I consider the small horizontal run out the back of the stove through the wall, and the offset, I know this shortens the effective height of the chimney. The offset jog is only a 2 foot section.
Given the horizontal run, the offset jog, my moderately warm climate, and my low-slope roof, would you recommend extending the chimney? I'm concerned that if I add enough pipe to do any good, I will need to add another extended roof bracket. Since the roof is so low, and I'm already near the peak, I don't know how I will attach long enough brackets.
Are there other solutions? Should I be enclosing the chimney pipe in a chase? Our daytime temps are 45-55F. Our night temps rarely get below 35, and even that is a stretch.
I'm trying to solve the problems before I start installing. Thanks for any advice you can give this newbie!
I finally ordered my Dura-Vent chimney pipe yesterday, but am concerned about it being tall enough. I'm concerned that I won't get enough draft for an EPA rated stove. The house is definitely not airtight. I have a very low slope to my roof, and the chimney will be running through a wall thimble. It will also need to make an offset to avoid the peak of the roof and allow a place to attach the wall straps.
The manufacturer recommends a 16 foot chimney, although it is not required. I have ordered enough chimney pipe to be 15 feet above the stove outlet. The roof is only 8 feet above the stove outlet. This leaves 7 feet above the roof. I know I need to use a brace at 5 feet above the roof. I am concerned that I won't have enough draft at this height. If I consider the small horizontal run out the back of the stove through the wall, and the offset, I know this shortens the effective height of the chimney. The offset jog is only a 2 foot section.
Given the horizontal run, the offset jog, my moderately warm climate, and my low-slope roof, would you recommend extending the chimney? I'm concerned that if I add enough pipe to do any good, I will need to add another extended roof bracket. Since the roof is so low, and I'm already near the peak, I don't know how I will attach long enough brackets.
Are there other solutions? Should I be enclosing the chimney pipe in a chase? Our daytime temps are 45-55F. Our night temps rarely get below 35, and even that is a stretch.
I'm trying to solve the problems before I start installing. Thanks for any advice you can give this newbie!