I recently bought a 91 year old house. It has an unlined, brick chimney which has been used for an oil furnace (and apparently before that for a coal furnace). I am going to abandon the oil furnace after I use up the oil already in the tank (very old furnace, not in good condition). I will be heating with a combination of a Solarsheat (passive solar heater) and a new wood stove (either a Quadrafire or Dutchwest). The chimney has an old outlet for a wood stove, now covered by an old cover (like a plate) which will be removed to access the chimney.
I had my chimney sweep come to assess the situation. He tells me that I need a double-walled stainless steel liner. He says the chimney is in pretty good condition but that he wouldn't "feel right" unless it had a double-wall liner. I questioned him about the reason for it and he was kind of vague. This will make the installation very expensive. The house (and chimney) is two stories high, with an attic, so probably about 20 to 25 feet of liner will be needed. My question is this: what conditions in the chimney would require a double-walled liner? What might another option be? The estimate for the materials and installation came to about $2,000.
I had my chimney sweep come to assess the situation. He tells me that I need a double-walled stainless steel liner. He says the chimney is in pretty good condition but that he wouldn't "feel right" unless it had a double-wall liner. I questioned him about the reason for it and he was kind of vague. This will make the installation very expensive. The house (and chimney) is two stories high, with an attic, so probably about 20 to 25 feet of liner will be needed. My question is this: what conditions in the chimney would require a double-walled liner? What might another option be? The estimate for the materials and installation came to about $2,000.