I recently purchased my first home and as you could expect, spent most of my free time at the hardware store. Every time I passed in and out of Home Depot, I saw a Englander 13-NC sitting in the clearance section. After a few visits to the store I couldn't pass up $450 on a decent stove. My house has an existing fireplace I wanted to use this stove with, so I took some measurements and in my haste everything seemed fine.
After buying a few buddies dinner, we had the stove unloaded into my basement next to my fireplace. Initial impression: It looks a little bigger than I measured. After researching a bit more on what it would take to get this puppy installed, I'm questioning whether I made the right move.
My fireplace:
(broken image removed)
The stove:
(broken image removed)
The measurements I took are as follows:
Fireplace opening - W 35" H 26.5"
Stove - W 25.3" H 27" or 28.3" counting the height of the rear heat shield/plate piece.
I think I'm safe as far as width is concerned. The back of the fireplace doesn't taper down to 24" wide for a good 18" of depth.
(broken image removed)
As far as height is concerned, my measurements are taken with the metal base. The stove is about an inch shorter if I use the legs instead. I've also considered cutting the legs another inch shorter to gain more clearance.
Another more destructive idea was to "lower" the hearth. I could remove some brick and the stone base and gain about 2".
(broken image removed)
I'm also not sure how much room I'll need to install and attach my chimney liner. I know that once you get past the chimney opening, there's a lot of room up to the damper (which I'm also wondering about removing for the install. Angle grinder?)
(broken image removed)
Any suggestions or ideas are appreciated. I'm going to start with switching the legs any playing around to get an idea how much room I'll need. I'm starting to think I should have gone with an insert, but I like the stove and know I would have a hard time finding something close to the quality for the price I paid. Please, help me make this fit!
After buying a few buddies dinner, we had the stove unloaded into my basement next to my fireplace. Initial impression: It looks a little bigger than I measured. After researching a bit more on what it would take to get this puppy installed, I'm questioning whether I made the right move.
My fireplace:
(broken image removed)
The stove:
(broken image removed)
The measurements I took are as follows:
Fireplace opening - W 35" H 26.5"
Stove - W 25.3" H 27" or 28.3" counting the height of the rear heat shield/plate piece.
I think I'm safe as far as width is concerned. The back of the fireplace doesn't taper down to 24" wide for a good 18" of depth.
(broken image removed)
As far as height is concerned, my measurements are taken with the metal base. The stove is about an inch shorter if I use the legs instead. I've also considered cutting the legs another inch shorter to gain more clearance.
Another more destructive idea was to "lower" the hearth. I could remove some brick and the stone base and gain about 2".
(broken image removed)
I'm also not sure how much room I'll need to install and attach my chimney liner. I know that once you get past the chimney opening, there's a lot of room up to the damper (which I'm also wondering about removing for the install. Angle grinder?)
(broken image removed)
Any suggestions or ideas are appreciated. I'm going to start with switching the legs any playing around to get an idea how much room I'll need. I'm starting to think I should have gone with an insert, but I like the stove and know I would have a hard time finding something close to the quality for the price I paid. Please, help me make this fit!