Hello,
I am closing in on completing my hearth, and installing a PE T6.
I am curious if Selkirk pipe would be a better buy than duravent, and have had a difficult time searching the stovepipe threads here at hearth.cim so i feel less than confident about what I should know re. stovepipe.
The PE is a stand-alone unit, corner install with a pitched cathedral ceiling. At this time I am looking at doing single wall pipe up to the ceiling and then going out with the double wall chimnney.
The single wall will be a 8-9 ft rise to the ceiling, with about a foot of ceiling/rafter space and a 5 ft chimney past that.
This is a straight shot with no bends.
Also, since the T6 has an air adjustment, is a flue damper necessary? I read a thread stating that it was not, because you have th edamper on the stove....
Would there be any advantage to not having one, or is it actually 100% necessary?
I am closing in on completing my hearth, and installing a PE T6.
I am curious if Selkirk pipe would be a better buy than duravent, and have had a difficult time searching the stovepipe threads here at hearth.cim so i feel less than confident about what I should know re. stovepipe.
The PE is a stand-alone unit, corner install with a pitched cathedral ceiling. At this time I am looking at doing single wall pipe up to the ceiling and then going out with the double wall chimnney.
The single wall will be a 8-9 ft rise to the ceiling, with about a foot of ceiling/rafter space and a 5 ft chimney past that.
This is a straight shot with no bends.
Also, since the T6 has an air adjustment, is a flue damper necessary? I read a thread stating that it was not, because you have th edamper on the stove....
Would there be any advantage to not having one, or is it actually 100% necessary?