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George E. Cawthon
 
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Default Insulate and seal a furnace stack in the attic?

Speedy Jim wrote:
George E. Cawthon wrote:

Speedy Jim wrote:

damncold wrote:

Recently I had a home energy audit done. The auditor said there was
quite a bit of air leakage where the furnace stack (a round sheet metal
stack) comes into the attic. He said I should seal the by-pass in the
attic and "thought" expandable foam would be OK. Anyone know if this
could be a fire hazard?
He also pointed out that the furnace stack is not insulated and is
giving off a good deal of heat in the attic - which is evident by the
size of the icicles hanging from my eaves. Is there any safe way to
insulate a metal furnace stack? Keep in mind - this is a crawl-space
sized attic. I've been up there before and it is very hard to move
around in. Thanks!



Insulating the flue pipe in the attic will have almost ZERO effect
on your energy consumption. Any heat now being lost up there is
being transferred to the roof or whisked out the gable/soffit vents.

Sealing around it to stop air movement from the living space will
be beneficial.

Jim



You are too speedy, he is talking about loss from the living space.




No. There were *two* separate issues. Here is the second one, as
presented by OP:

"He also pointed out that the furnace stack is not insulated and is
giving off a good deal of heat in the attic "

It being hard to work in the limited crawl space he has,
insulating this sounded like a losing proposition.
Jim


Ok, I missed that. There is a point in insulating
it. If the attic remains cold he is less likely
to have ice dams form. I'll bet that most of the
heat he see in the attic is from the hole (around
the stack) between the living area and the attic.
So in essence, I agree with you, insulating the
stack in the attic is rather a waste.