This is really just a curiosity thing right now untill/if we get a second heat zone installed.
We have two fireplaces in the house. Would it be legal/possible/practical to put a small wood stove inside one of them. The house is tall enough that the smoke shouldn't affect neighbors. As far as codes go I'm pretty sure with the age of the house it's grandfathered in but I would still want it to be safe and covered by homeowners. I guess that's a question for the town and insurance company though. Preferably somthing could be fabricated non-permenantly to make a stove seal to the flu. Failing that, could a pipe be run straight down the chimney to the heater then the flu sealed around that?
I ask about sealing to the flu because they share a chimney. One runs straight up and would be easy to drop a pipe down. The other which is more centrally located (the one I'd lik to put the stove in) goes over at an angle then meets the other chimney making a pipe much harder to install. Also if one chimney gets a pipe the other fireplace couldn't be used.
I'm not realy looking at this as a DIY. It would involve a chimney guy making the connections, getting a permit if necessary, and cleaning everything. I'm just curious as to if it is duable at a reasonable cost.
We have two fireplaces in the house. Would it be legal/possible/practical to put a small wood stove inside one of them. The house is tall enough that the smoke shouldn't affect neighbors. As far as codes go I'm pretty sure with the age of the house it's grandfathered in but I would still want it to be safe and covered by homeowners. I guess that's a question for the town and insurance company though. Preferably somthing could be fabricated non-permenantly to make a stove seal to the flu. Failing that, could a pipe be run straight down the chimney to the heater then the flu sealed around that?
I ask about sealing to the flu because they share a chimney. One runs straight up and would be easy to drop a pipe down. The other which is more centrally located (the one I'd lik to put the stove in) goes over at an angle then meets the other chimney making a pipe much harder to install. Also if one chimney gets a pipe the other fireplace couldn't be used.
I'm not realy looking at this as a DIY. It would involve a chimney guy making the connections, getting a permit if necessary, and cleaning everything. I'm just curious as to if it is duable at a reasonable cost.