THE CHIMNEY FIRE!!!
Few flues are stout enough to come through a severe chimney fire unscathed. There is no such thing as a "friendly" chimney fire that will safely clean out your flue. With a roar like a freight train, it can crack open flueliner and chimney and spread to the structure of the house.
"Flue fires are perennial". They happen every winter when creosote deposits on the smoke chamber and flue walls are set ablaze by high heat or by flames licking up the chimney.
A chimney fire can be exciting and
light up the night, but it is NEVER a laughing matter.
Here's how it happens and why it can threaten your life
and your property.
This type of creosote makes for the hottest burning fuel for a flue
fire. The thicker the layer of creosote, the hotter the fire.
The heat generated by this infurnal can raise to ignition point, the
temperature of wood structures on the other side of a chimney, so
that it also starts to burn threatening the entire house.
Wood doesn't necesarily need contact with fire in order
to ignite. It just needs"air, oxygen and enough heat."
A house may survive the first chimney fire, but the intense
heat has started pyrolyzing* nearby combustibles, thus lowering
their ignition temperature. This makes the structure very
vulnerable to a subsequent chimney fire.
A damaged flueliner can no longer protect either the chimney
or the house. And instead of being all burned out, creosote
may instead be all puffed up to the point of partially or
completely blocking the flue.
Excessive creosote build-up is caused by one or more of the following:
A flue too big for the appliance it serves. Most open fireplace flues are too big to be used to
vent a woodburning stove or a fireplace insert with out a liner.
This causes a sluggish fluedraft effect and gases expand to fill the space then quickly cool down, allowing creosote to deposit on the chimney walls, where it sticks like glue.
Solution: Install a stainless steel liner that is properly sized for the stove or fireplace insert. A liner is required by the building code in Ontario when installing a fireplace insert in an open fireplace
Poor woodburning habits, such as severely limiting the air supply in a stove to
achieve an all-night burn can cause a sluggish draft and a smoldering fire that
doesn't get hot enough to burn the volatile gases released by the wood and creosote will form quickly.
Solution: Burn smaller, hotter fires using seasoned firewood with a good draft never air-starve the fire. This way, the heat will quickly warm up the flue and increase
the draft, while volatile gases burn up in the stove the way they should and your chimney will have much less build up.
An oversize or outdated stove; When a stove is too big for the space it heats, it's likely to be burned in the
closeddown, creosote-producing mode. Also, many stoves sold in the 70's and
early 80's are now obsolete. They're not as cleanburning as the newer certified models
designed to meet new emissions standards.
Solution: Replace your old stove with a new high-tech unit correctly
sized for the space you want to heat and matched with the proper venting system.
A neglected chimney flue. Many of us don't give our chimneys a second thought until something goes wrong.
Solution:Find an experienced, certified professional chimney sweep right away. Put your solid fuel burning system on a regular inspection and maintenance schedule.
Do-lt-yourselfers.
Stove installation and chimney service work are "NOT" home handyman chores. They call for professional know-how, special training, technical expertise and familiarity with the local building codes.
Solution:
Always intrust installation and maintanence to a professional
A woodburning appliance with improper venting and an unlined chimney cannot give the house proper protection or provide you with efficient heat.
Ask a professional about good flueliners; ueually stainless steel. They are designed both for unlined chimneys and as replacement for damaged clay tile liners.
If your house and chimney were lucky enough to survive that first flue fire, don't wait for a second or third event to do them in. Now that you've learned how a chimney fire can take the whole house down, do use caution and take preventive action.

