71F outside and you are burning?! Man, that's hard core.
That's what I was thinking
That's almost AC weather
71F outside and you are burning?! Man, that's hard core.
71F outside and you are burning?! Man, that's hard core.
At 71F and sunny outside we'd be outdoors.
I love an overheated house. Underwear weather I call it. Lol.
I will be adding to mine. Just waiting for a good day to do it. I'm going to rent a lift to put it on.Ohiojoe: I consider my smoke smell problem fixed. I strongly suspect a few more feet of pipe will fix yours too. I hope it is a "doable" thing for you.
I was told that I didn't need to add another brace. And that I already have the largest brace available.Be sure to brace properly if necessary.
After I add the new section I will have about 12 feet outside. What should I use for a brace if I already have the longest one.Chimney bracing depends on the amount of chimney that is unsecured. A brace is required at every 5 ft. of chimney that projects past the roof exit point.
Wow thats already quite a long chimney.I'm adding a 3 foot section.
Knowing what I know now I would have never put it there when I did.As I understand it, you're supposed to have that brace clamp the pipe at the 5' point above the roof and then the next one five feet above that. These sky high pipe chimneys don't seem attractive to me.
Roof holes can be patched and skillfully reshingled in that area. We had to have that done when we raised the house and removed the masonry chimneys. It worked out fine.
Sounds like you could lower the current brace to the 5 ft point and then add a new one with longer legs (Duravent legs = 114" max) at 5 ft above the 1st brace if the legs will reach that far.Just got on the roof to measure. The brace is at 6 feet. I have 33 inches about that. Plus th3 cap. The legs are at about 50 degrees. And the legs measure 71 inches. Could I just move this brace up and add one lower?
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