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The Water Cooler
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Wood Stove Pipe Installer
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<blockquote data-quote="mr ed" data-source="post: 3841814" data-attributes="member: 6777"><p>Wood stove pipe? I think I'd just cough up the money and buy a metal one.</p><p></p><p>No, seriously I had a Sears Heatalator box stove for 25 years. </p><p>Wasn't that hard to install. It had single wall pipe coming out the back and going to ceiling.</p><p>They were 2-3 foot sections, you squirted in some heat paste as you put them together with sheet metal screws.</p><p>Then the stuff going thru the ceiling, attic and roof was like stainless looking double lined pipe assembly which has a set amount of clearances to maintain per city code. It had a square box in the cieling and a funnel looking collar on the roof. Those were screwed in place to keep it rigid. If I remember right it had to stick up a certain amount like a chimney to prevent smoke from coming back in house thru roof vents and eaves.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="mr ed, post: 3841814, member: 6777"] Wood stove pipe? I think I'd just cough up the money and buy a metal one. No, seriously I had a Sears Heatalator box stove for 25 years. Wasn't that hard to install. It had single wall pipe coming out the back and going to ceiling. They were 2-3 foot sections, you squirted in some heat paste as you put them together with sheet metal screws. Then the stuff going thru the ceiling, attic and roof was like stainless looking double lined pipe assembly which has a set amount of clearances to maintain per city code. It had a square box in the cieling and a funnel looking collar on the roof. Those were screwed in place to keep it rigid. If I remember right it had to stick up a certain amount like a chimney to prevent smoke from coming back in house thru roof vents and eaves. [/QUOTE]
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