How to connect pipe to back of All Nighter Mid-Moe?

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hendr1x

New Member
Dec 28, 2024
3
US
Hello everyone,
My 6" piping going from stove to chimney was super old so I decided to pull it off and replace it. I can't fit the new pipe on to the back of my All Nighter Mid-Moe. I am using the standard 6" stove piping from lowes. The stuff you have to connect the seam on. Do I need another adapter? If so, can someone tell me what it is?

Thanks for any help you can provide.
 
Sorry. The new pipe is too small as far as I can tell. About an 1/8". Also the folded seem is interfering as it creates a blockage in the ID. The old pipe seemed have to its seem spread open a bit to make it work but the entire setup was done incorrectly and I would rather do right.
 
When I was running mine, I used a 6'' length of single wall with no crimped end. It slid right over the stove's outlet.
Then the crimped end of stovepipe goes right in.
 
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Sorry. The new pipe is too small as far as I can tell. About an 1/8". Also the folded seem is interfering as it creates a blockage in the ID. The old pipe seemed have to its seem spread open a bit to make it work but the entire setup was done incorrectly and I would rather do right.
The collar is probably well casing many old stoves were and it's not quite the right size. Hammer the pipe out with a ball peen hammer or get a duravent skirted adapter
 
Hey everyone, just in case someone reads this thread in the future. I ended up getting "Imperial 6 in. D Steel Stove Pipe Adapter (# BM0314)" and it worked well. I am assuming the DuraVent 6 in. Single-Wall Chimney Stove Pipe Adapter (# 6DBK-AD) would work as well.
 
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Post #4 is what I did. I cut a 6'' length off of a straight piece. I cut on the female end. It slid right over the stove's outlet. A bit snug but fit. Used a 2x4 cut and a small hammer to tap it on lightly. Once I had 3-4'' slid on, I proceeded with the rest of my install. i had tried at one point to get an adapter. Warehouse chimney supplier sold me wrong one. They were a chimney/stove contractor outlet. I am only aware from this thread that there are adapters that do work. My fix never gave me an issue. Not even any creo drip. Although I've always been picky about burning dry wood, I have had oak, at times, just a bit on the wetter side. Seasoned 2 yrs.... so maybe 20-23% moisture. Still no drip.
 
@MongoMongoson had an All Nighter.
Any remembrance of what you used?
 
@MongoMongoson had an All Nighter.
Any remembrance of what you used?

I used a cleanout Tee. Female pointing up, the other female end slipped over the stove outlet on the back of the stove, and the cleanout cap was pointing down. It was a tight fit to slide it on over the stove outlet.

I know that generally a male end should insert inside of a stove outlet, but I had a copy of the owner's manual. That was how the install instructions specified install. I never had an issue with creosote dripping and I never took that cleanout Tee off after it was installed, until I sold the stove. The stove outlet is long on and All Nighter and, as I said, it was a tight fit to get it on. It was not something I wanted to remove for standard stove cleaning.
 
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