Probably same spot where you got the brush stuck. Now I understand the couplers. You have reduced the pipe size enough that it is impeding your draft.
the coupler is the same size and would be no different if I was using an elbow coupler.
Probably same spot where you got the brush stuck. Now I understand the couplers. You have reduced the pipe size enough that it is impeding your draft.
OK that is not how it is supposed to be done at all you should have a tee inside the chimney with the snout coming out the crock. Then switch to stove pipe which you can easily disassemble to clean
Probably crap sittin in the bend at the bottom of the chimney or you kinked the liner at that bend when you were messing around with it or any number of other possibilities. It also looks like you have clearance issues with the wood framing in a few spotsOk I can get that now but why was it working and not now?
My basement stove has a flex liner turning 90 degrees into the crock to a thimble. He is gonna find the 90 in the chimney full of crud from his brushing.
Really? You should know better lol.My basement stove has a flex liner turning 90 degrees into the crock to a thimble. He is gonna find the 90 in the chimney full of crud from his brushing.
Well some thing changed you need to take it apart again and check everything for dirt or distortions in the pipe.I took it apart completely and brushed the entire pipe, so there should be no crud inside.
Really? You should know better lol.
I have seen it done and it can work it just needs cleaned out at the bottom more often is all i would have opened up the thimble and put the tee on the bottom. Or done it right and broken out the liners so you had room lolI was put on this Earth to drive you up a wall bholler.
After three and a half hours of trying to get that tee down that 30+ foot chimney, gently turning and bringing it into the thimble got really, really attractive. And has done a great job for eight or nine years. Not how I wanted to do it, but if I was gonna line that flue then..
Double check that rear exhaust on the circulator, looks like a ton of wet creosote sitting on the floor.
You also might try running a blowtorch up the liner to see if this is from a cold chimney reversing what little draft you have.
That is why we run the liner down and put a second tee inAnyway, the bottom of the tee would have been too far up from the outside clean-out to reach it anyway.
Oh well at least it worked out not optimal but whatever it works.That was the original plan. But alas...
Oh well at least it worked out not optimal but whatever it works.
Thank goodness, I don't think he needs anymore liners sitting in his backyard
I use the same wood in my fireplace that I used in my woodstove with no problems.
It is much easier to successfully burn sub-par wood in a fireplace than in a stove. The wood I used to burn in my fireplace would have water dripping and steaming out the ends of the logs. I could never burn that in my stove without problems.
It sounds like something is killing the draft since you cleaned the chimney and reconnected the liner. That could mean an obstruction or something else reducing flow, or an opening in the system, like a clean-out door.
My guess is that there is something going on right where that liner enters the chimney. You say there is a connector there, going into a clay tile I assume? Is it possible that the connector is pushed further in than the pipe was before, so that some of the flow is restricted?
Picture that pipe from the stove coming to its end exactly flush with the block chimney -- there would be zero obstruction to air flow at the 90, other than the change in flow direction itself. Now picture it extending all the way in and right through to the other side of the chimney -- in which case, it would be tight against the far wall of the chimney and not letting ANY air flow at all! So I'm wondering, is there any chance the newly made connection itself is somewhat obstructing the flow right at that 90 into the block, so that smoke cannot flow as freely as before?
Ok now you have to work on clearance problemsYea I get that but the connector isn't exactly at the bend it comes out at the wall, but thanks I think I got it. There was a restriction at the top. When I put everything back together I did not notice that I placed my rain cap all the way down restricting the flow completely. From the ground I could not see it until I got onto the roof.
I think I got it. There was a restriction at the top.
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