At Home In The Woods

   / At Home In The Woods #4,581  
I forgot to mention. I bought s SootEater rotary flue cleaning system last summer which will allow me to clean the flue from the basement using a cordless drill. I read some very positive reviews on it, but have not used it yet:

Buy.com - Sooteater Rotary Chimney Cleaning Syste

My flue cap is a Windbeater type which uses no screen. I really think screens are just to keep critters out, not sparks. Even when the screen on the Quonset flue was in I could see that chunks of slag/creosote had fallen out onto the roof. Like Dave said the screen clogs quick, so I jut removed it. If I had a cedar shake roof I might think twice, but with steel I don't think a screen gains any safety except for the purple martins & bats.
 
   / At Home In The Woods #4,582  
I would like opinions on the so called "creosote logs" that are supposed to clean your flue by just burning one every so often where the build up flakes off and falls down to the fire pit. Do they work and worth buying?
 
   / At Home In The Woods #4,583  
The most sensible chimney cleaning I've seen was in Germany. Tall homes/chimneys are common there. They have a built-in, removable masonry access block in the chimney that is accessed from the attic. They use a brush on a flexible springy shaft that they run up and down from that access block. No need to get on the roof. The roofing on older homes was often natural slate and quite steep, so arriving at this method of chimney cleaning would make a lot of sense.

I can't find a pic, but the access block was wedge shaped such that it sits down in groove and is held in place by gravity.
 
   / At Home In The Woods
  • Thread Starter
#4,584  
I forgot to mention. I bought s SootEater rotary flue cleaning system last summer which will allow me to clean the flue from the basement using a cordless drill. I read some very positive reviews on it, but have not used it yet:

Buy.com - Sooteater Rotary Chimney Cleaning Syste
Rick,
Let us know how well that thing works. Do you plan on using it from inside the house?
Obed
 
   / At Home In The Woods
  • Thread Starter
#4,585  
The most sensible chimney cleaning I've seen was in Germany. Tall homes/chimneys are common there. They have a built-in, removable masonry access block in the chimney that is accessed from the attic. They use a brush on a flexible springy shaft that they run up and down from that access block. No need to get on the roof. The roofing on older homes was often natural slate and quite steep, so arriving at this method of chimney cleaning would make a lot of sense.

I can't find a pic, but the access block was wedge shaped such that it sits down in groove and is held in place by gravity.
Dave,
I couldn't help thinking about my house when ready the above description of the Germany chimney designs. My chimney flue is accessible from the attic. It would sure be nice not to have to climb on top of the chimney.
Obed
 
   / At Home In The Woods #4,586  
My concern with a system like this, and locking flues is that if it caught somehow, it would twist the locking mechanism apart. Had this happen to me with a pole system. Felt like a dope when I thought "srub up and down and twist" Twist unlocked a section in the attic. Ugly.


I forgot to mention. I bought s SootEater rotary flue cleaning system last summer which will allow me to clean the flue from the basement using a cordless drill. I read some very positive reviews on it, but have not used it yet:

Buy.com - Sooteater Rotary Chimney Cleaning Syste

My flue cap is a Windbeater type which uses no screen. I really think screens are just to keep critters out, not sparks. Even when the screen on the Quonset flue was in I could see that chunks of slag/creosote had fallen out onto the roof. Like Dave said the screen clogs quick, so I jut removed it. If I had a cedar shake roof I might think twice, but with steel I don't think a screen gains any safety except for the purple martins & bats.
 
   / At Home In The Woods #4,587  
Dave,
I couldn't help thinking about my house when ready the above description of the Germany chimney designs. My chimney flue is accessible from the attic. It would sure be nice not to have to climb on top of the chimney.
Obed

I don't know if there is anything available that would work for you, be worth keeping an eye out for something. I suppose there could be a special SS tee fitting that you could insert into the existing flue pipe that would give you access. It would need to be fire-safe above all else. Wouldn't help with the clogging in the chimney cap screen, but that could be remedied.

The chimneys in Germany were all masonry types. The access block was about 4" thick and made a pretty decent seal when set in place. It's own weight pulls it down into the wedged opening, it cannot be pulled straight out, has to be lifted and tilted.
 
   / At Home In The Woods #4,589  
I have a double flue chimney - one side for coal stoker the other side for NG furnace. It is constructed of red brick with a clay flue insert. Each side has outside clean out doors. I have toyed with the idea of seeing if the fiberglass rods would bend enough to push the brush up from the bottom to avoid standing on the roof and working from the top down. I wouldn't have a lot of soot like wood burners produce. Any thoughts?

PAGUY
 
   / At Home In The Woods #4,590  
Obed, your solution is obvious. You should start hinting now for a man-lift under the Christmas tree. Just think of all the tree trimmin' and other high jobs around the house. No more worry about the gutter cleaning. Just a nice ride on the man-lift and it's done.;)
 
 
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