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Posted by spaco on January 26, 2006, 7:16 pm
Please log in for more thread options Depends upon local codes. Also depends on where you are (city, country,
etc.) Depends, from a practical standpoint on what kind of building you
have. Depends on whether you want your installation to be insurable or
not.
Blacksmith forge flues don't get as hot as wood stove flues, but I don't
think building inspectors or insurers care much about the difference.
For instance: even after a full day of forging, I can put my hand on
my forge hood or chimney. Going up into the attic, the double wall pipe
is hardly hot to the touch.
On the other hand, we normally run the chimney on our maple syrup
evaporator at 750 degrees 3 feet above the firebox. (We use stainless
steel for that chimney for the first 10 feet)
Isn't a "class A" chimney either a triple wall or a double wall with
insulation in between?
If I remember correctly (been a while) there is also a class B that
is simply double wall pipe with about a 1" air space. That is what I
have. If your chimney can be 24" from any combustable surface, I think
you can use a single wall pipe, but check your local situation to be sure.
Lastly, I think you only NEED the special pipe when you are actually
running through the combustable surface.
You can drop in to your local HVAC shop and ask questions. If you are
polite about it, they can give you a lot of helpful advice and mabye a
few hints that are on the "edge".
But remember this: What happens if you have a fire and the insurance
company decides you went too cheap? Will they pay the claim?
Good luck,
Pete Stanaitis
Barn Jeff wrote:
> I'm building a flue for a coal forge in an outbuilding. Planning a
> sidedraft based on plans from anvilfire. The flue will be 12" straight
> up ~20'. Question is: Do I need to use the double walled class A flue
> where it goes through the roof or is single wall cool enough? The
> cheapest I've found 12" Class A is $62/ft. Thanks,
> Jeff
>
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