Hello,
Let me start off by saying I know very little about wood stoves. I bought a house that had an old, but little used Timberline fireplace insert (I believe ‘slammer’ is the proper lingo) (photos attached). It vents directly into the existing terra cotta (13x13 inch) flu. I’ve used it a few times and it was hard to get it to draw, but once going, it did a nice job of heating my small split-level house. I did enough research to find out this set up is not ideal and possibly not safe, etc. So, I wanted to install a flexible steel liner kit into my existing flu and connect it to the stove – seemed like an easy DIY project. I did my research on the local building codes, and realized the stove must be UL listed. I pulled out the stove and looked everywhere for a UL stamp or even a model number. I found nothing on the stove except for the inside of the door – stamped in the metal is ‘TSFR’ and right below it, ‘144C’. I have a feeling an inspector will not sign off on any installation that is not UL listed or known to be tested to a certain standard. So, with that, here are my questions:
· What do the letters and numbers mean that are stamped on the door? Model number perhaps?
· Not finding a UL stamp on the stove, is it a sure thing it is not UL listed? Anything else I can check?
· Assuming the stove is not UL listed and my building inspector won’t accept anything less, is my only option to find a new stove?
· What should I do with the Timberline if I can’t use it – are they worth anything or should I just sell it for scrap?
I live in northern VA – so, I would not use the stove much. But I thought if I could make it work with a DIY steel liner, it would be worth it to me. If I have to buy a whole new stove, I’m not sure it’d be worth it to me, but I’m not sure how much a more modern and UL listed stove for my space would cost. Calling a pro is probably not worth it to me (got an estimate for $3K to install the liner and they never said anything about my stove not being UL listed – did they not care or not check or maybe they didn’t think it was an issue?)
Thanks much and I appreciate any and all advice!
Steve
![[Hearth.com] Need advice on old Timberline slammer [Hearth.com] Need advice on old Timberline slammer](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/72/72609-62ab9a1a8450bf22a75d002ae5468ce6.jpg?hash=OvCKTm9QZU)
![[Hearth.com] Need advice on old Timberline slammer [Hearth.com] Need advice on old Timberline slammer](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/72/72610-66aa7a84c4a6c9e4d2e8dd1383b284db.jpg?hash=-v7A76A1d-)
Let me start off by saying I know very little about wood stoves. I bought a house that had an old, but little used Timberline fireplace insert (I believe ‘slammer’ is the proper lingo) (photos attached). It vents directly into the existing terra cotta (13x13 inch) flu. I’ve used it a few times and it was hard to get it to draw, but once going, it did a nice job of heating my small split-level house. I did enough research to find out this set up is not ideal and possibly not safe, etc. So, I wanted to install a flexible steel liner kit into my existing flu and connect it to the stove – seemed like an easy DIY project. I did my research on the local building codes, and realized the stove must be UL listed. I pulled out the stove and looked everywhere for a UL stamp or even a model number. I found nothing on the stove except for the inside of the door – stamped in the metal is ‘TSFR’ and right below it, ‘144C’. I have a feeling an inspector will not sign off on any installation that is not UL listed or known to be tested to a certain standard. So, with that, here are my questions:
· What do the letters and numbers mean that are stamped on the door? Model number perhaps?
· Not finding a UL stamp on the stove, is it a sure thing it is not UL listed? Anything else I can check?
· Assuming the stove is not UL listed and my building inspector won’t accept anything less, is my only option to find a new stove?
· What should I do with the Timberline if I can’t use it – are they worth anything or should I just sell it for scrap?
I live in northern VA – so, I would not use the stove much. But I thought if I could make it work with a DIY steel liner, it would be worth it to me. If I have to buy a whole new stove, I’m not sure it’d be worth it to me, but I’m not sure how much a more modern and UL listed stove for my space would cost. Calling a pro is probably not worth it to me (got an estimate for $3K to install the liner and they never said anything about my stove not being UL listed – did they not care or not check or maybe they didn’t think it was an issue?)
Thanks much and I appreciate any and all advice!
Steve
![[Hearth.com] Need advice on old Timberline slammer [Hearth.com] Need advice on old Timberline slammer](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/72/72609-62ab9a1a8450bf22a75d002ae5468ce6.jpg?hash=OvCKTm9QZU)
![[Hearth.com] Need advice on old Timberline slammer [Hearth.com] Need advice on old Timberline slammer](https://www.hearth.com/talk/data/attachments/72/72610-66aa7a84c4a6c9e4d2e8dd1383b284db.jpg?hash=-v7A76A1d-)