I finally got my act in gear and bought a SootEater... in an effort to clean the inside portion of my wood stove pipe... Summit Classic...
I have a wire cleaner that I used to do the outside portion which is straight up… but the inside portion has a twist up about 4 feet up from the stove that leads horizontally about 2 feet to the outside.
I made the mistake of not asking you guys about this before I bought this for theater, given that everyone says it's very flexible.
Here is the dilemma… The instructions suggest not to bend the rods at much of an angle, but to get the head of the sooeater in through the stove and up the pipe, it's going to be a fairly sharp angle, which the booklet strongly says to avoid. I guess I could just hook it up to the drill and try it to see what happens, but I figured I would ask you guys if this is what you do before I actually go ahead and do it… It's a deep stove, so the rods would have to go about a foot into the stove, and then bend fairly sharply upward.
So, just to get a feel for how it would work, I put the first rod on the head and hand-navigated it up into the pipe, and that alone got a ton of the larger stuff off the inside of the pipe. However, upon visual inspection, I still see that the inside of the pipe is lined with a thin layer of creosote. It is certainly not very thick, but you can see the gummy stuff on the side. Do you feel that this layer would be a detrimental situation, or, is the important part that I got the chunky stuff off the pipe... in other words... how clean is clean?
I took the whole pipe off about 5 years ago to clean it, but it was a real bear to reassemble... an all afternoon kind of thing...
I'll try to attach photos so you can see what I'm dealing with...
Thoughts of how to approach?
Thanks for any input you'd like to offer!!