That will work. I think I'd have raised the hearth pad the inch personally, maybe use a piece of ply board 1/4" and 3/4" stacked .Then face off the 1" space that was left around the edge. But hey what ever works. What you're doing looks decent.Here is a shot of what the pipe situation is in the back.
View attachment 190163
Here is a shot of the square tubing. I will cut it to size, weld it on the corners, seal up the ends, grind it and paint it.
Here is a shot of what the pipe situation is in the back.
View attachment 190163
Here is a shot of the square tubing. I will cut it to size, weld it on the corners, seal up the ends, grind it and paint it.
View attachment 190164
Oh I see, you mean the "Outlet" is higher, not output. Words indeed have meaning LOL !What I meant was the earth stove is HIGHER in height with it's output it's 18" on center from the ground vs. 10" OC with the harman.
Ya you have never reported an issue, Tony , even in some of the brutal winter storms that have passed by your way in the last 3 years or so. So OAK may very well stabilize the OP's existing exhaust arrangement.Using an OAK,
my Outside pipe[avatar] faces the wind.. No house on that side to break any wind conditions but we never have any problems with smoke or whatever..
That will work. I think I'd have raised the hearth pad the inch personally, maybe use a piece of ply board 1/4" and 3/4" stacked .Then face off the 1" space that was left around the edge. But hey what ever works. What you're doing looks decent.
Looks like you're gonna fire that sucker off soon here !
Depends how ambitious you are. You can cut a stud by building a square frame (to carry the stud) from the same material the stud is made of. It's just easier to fall between studs is all. If you think about it, if life were ideal, the thimble should be mounted to a box frame anyway.I'm thinking about actually doing that. This summer. We plan to replace the marble there with a new product. When I do that I may add additional thickness underneath with 2 sheets of 1/2" plywood. Then tile on top of that. We'll see.
I really would have liked to go straight out the back of the stove with a new thimble and reduce the distance the stove is from the wall from 12" to 2" but I now believe that there is a stud directly behind the stove which will eliminate that as a possibility.
If it were not for adopting a 110 lb dog with nervous bladder I would be 1500 miles farther south
yes.. I shudder to think of how my stove in these strong winds/winter storms we get might operate without the OAK.Ya you have never reported an issue, Tony , even in some of the brutal winter storms that have passed by your way in the last 3 years or so. So OAK may very well stabilize the OP's existing exhaust arrangement.
This is encouraging even to myself as I think about a future basement stove. That would really open up my install location possibilities.
Good looking pup. We picked up another just last Monday night. Now we have two Aussies. One is 45 lbs. but the new on (Both a year old) is a big boy for an Aussie. He gets his nuts whacked tomorrow morning. LOL! Vet said he was one of the biggest he's seen. Tall, heavy and big. Not the size of yours though.If it were not for adopting a 110 lb dog with nervous bladder I would be 1500 miles farther south
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