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Chimney limitation

 
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Hi all,

I have a 6 inch wide and 40 foot long insulated and straight up steel tube chimney. The draft is very good (almost too good). Can I build a 7 or 8 inch batch box or do I need to stick to 6 or 6.5 in order not to get problems / sub optimize?

Thanks!
Henric
 
rocket scientist
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Location: latitude 47 N.W. montana zone 6A
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Hi Henric;
Can you partially replace (without bureaucracy issues) the indoor portion and increase its size?
You might be able to build a 7" if you can increase your interior pipe size, and leave only the 6" penetration thru the roof.
If not, I will tell you that a 6" extended-length batch really puts out the heat. Increasing dimensions to 6.5" as Peter suggested would make a fine batch box.
You sure can try pushing a 7" batch thru your 6" pipe but it might cause issues.
 
Henric Togereux
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Thanks Thomas!

Unfortunately, my house was built 1900 and the metal flu has been inserted into one of the original pipes in the brick chimney. Thus, it's 6 inch from roof to basement without any chance of making it bigger unless I rip it out completely... So... then I will have to stick to a 6-6.5 inch build. Though, you say that it is possible to make the depth of the burn chamber longer without compromising the efficiency? The recommended fire box depth for a 6 inch is 432 mm (sorry, I don't have the measurement in inches in front of me). Do you know how much I can extend the depth?

Best regards,
Henric
 
thomas rubino
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Hi Henric;
25% length increase is acceptable with Peter.
So up to 540mm is allowed, I suggest 500mm  (20") as a good length.
 
Henric Togereux
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Thanks! Then it's settled. Will start building this weekend 🙂
 
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