MossRoad
Super Moderator
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2001
- Messages
- 58,052
- Location
- South Bend, Indiana (near)
- Tractor
- Power Trac PT425 2001 Model Year
Be sure to check your screen at the top of your chimney periodically through the season. I check mine with binoculars from the ground. If you see any creosote or buildup, it is time for a cleaning of the screen and the entire pipe. Otherwise, depending on how often you burn, you need to clean it once or twice a year. Really no set time or formula. Just something that has to be done to prevent chimney fires or smoke coming back into the house if the screen gets plugged (I learned the hard way, but lucky no damage, just some light smoke coming out of the joint in the pipe above the stove). I bought 5 or 6 sections of the 4' cleaning rods and a brush sized for my pipe. I clean it in the early fall and then once again during the January thaw when there is no snow on the rooooooffffff ahhhhhhh!!! :laughing::confused3:
I scrub it up, down and around several times. All of the soot falls into the top of the stove. I can get all the way down to the 45 angles just above the stove. After I get the top section I remove the stovepipe and clean the last 4' and the 45's by hand with a wire brush. While the stovepipe is off, I vacuum the soot that fell down into the top of the stove with a shop vac. Then I remove a couple bricks from inside the stove so I can drop those two ceramic looking baffles that we talked about before and vacuum everything out real nice. Then put it back together again and light it up with a small fire to check for leaks.
It was 18 last night. 76 in the house! :thumbsup:
I scrub it up, down and around several times. All of the soot falls into the top of the stove. I can get all the way down to the 45 angles just above the stove. After I get the top section I remove the stovepipe and clean the last 4' and the 45's by hand with a wire brush. While the stovepipe is off, I vacuum the soot that fell down into the top of the stove with a shop vac. Then I remove a couple bricks from inside the stove so I can drop those two ceramic looking baffles that we talked about before and vacuum everything out real nice. Then put it back together again and light it up with a small fire to check for leaks.
It was 18 last night. 76 in the house! :thumbsup: