Greetings from Saskatchewan, Canada.
Before I get to the topic I must mention how grateful I am that the Google led me to this forum. My wife and I have been scouring the forums and have found answers to so many questions. Thank you for all the amazing vault of information.
We recently wrestled a Drolet Escape 1800 down the stairs of a 1950s built single-story farmhouse where we plan to reside post-retirement. A lot of renovation needs to be done to make this building comfortable and code-compliant. The house has an existing masonry chimney that has served past wood stoves and an oil burning furnace. The chimney is currently unused because the primary heat is now a propane direct vented furnace. Our plan is to eventually have the wood stove in the living room on the main floor. I say ‘eventually’ because before that happens there’s a LOT of renovation work required before it can be installed there.
So, the plan was to line the existing masonry chimney and use the Drolet in the basement as a supplemental heat source for a few years . After that we’d place it up on the main floor where it belongs and have an interior double-wall insulated stainless steel chimney go straight up about 16’. The masonry chimney from the basement would quite likely be capped off as we have no plans to finish the basement. Then my wife asked an interesting question (I hate it when she does that): “Why can’t we just buy the stainless steel double-walled and insulated pipe and use it as the masonry chimney ’liner’ for now and then when the renovations are done, pull it out and use it on the main floor?” If this can be done it certainly would save the cost of an insulated liner that would go unused. After looking at the Selkirk Supervent specs it looks like it would fit. The masonry chimney is 17” square with a 9.5” square opening and the Supervent is just over 8” in diameter. The old (perfectly straight) masonry chimney would basically act as a chase I guess. Can this be done and still comply to building codes?
I appreciate all feedback from anyone patient enough to read to the end this long, rambling post.
-Cheers
Before I get to the topic I must mention how grateful I am that the Google led me to this forum. My wife and I have been scouring the forums and have found answers to so many questions. Thank you for all the amazing vault of information.
We recently wrestled a Drolet Escape 1800 down the stairs of a 1950s built single-story farmhouse where we plan to reside post-retirement. A lot of renovation needs to be done to make this building comfortable and code-compliant. The house has an existing masonry chimney that has served past wood stoves and an oil burning furnace. The chimney is currently unused because the primary heat is now a propane direct vented furnace. Our plan is to eventually have the wood stove in the living room on the main floor. I say ‘eventually’ because before that happens there’s a LOT of renovation work required before it can be installed there.
So, the plan was to line the existing masonry chimney and use the Drolet in the basement as a supplemental heat source for a few years . After that we’d place it up on the main floor where it belongs and have an interior double-wall insulated stainless steel chimney go straight up about 16’. The masonry chimney from the basement would quite likely be capped off as we have no plans to finish the basement. Then my wife asked an interesting question (I hate it when she does that): “Why can’t we just buy the stainless steel double-walled and insulated pipe and use it as the masonry chimney ’liner’ for now and then when the renovations are done, pull it out and use it on the main floor?” If this can be done it certainly would save the cost of an insulated liner that would go unused. After looking at the Selkirk Supervent specs it looks like it would fit. The masonry chimney is 17” square with a 9.5” square opening and the Supervent is just over 8” in diameter. The old (perfectly straight) masonry chimney would basically act as a chase I guess. Can this be done and still comply to building codes?
I appreciate all feedback from anyone patient enough to read to the end this long, rambling post.
-Cheers