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N. Thornton
 
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Default Surface for back of open fireplace

"Robert Irwin" catfishpcAThotmailDOTcom wrote in message ...
"N. Thornton" wrote in message
om...



Situation is - we had an old back boiler ripped out and replaced with

a
combi in another room (please do not treat statement as a troll....)

There is now a reasonable sized hole in the corner of our front room

which I
would like to put a basket gas fire in (plumber is ok with flue, room
dimensions etc so thats not a worry)

Basically I need something slightly decorative to put in back and

sides of
fireplace to tidy it all up and protect what I believe to be normal

bricks
towards the back of the fireplace.

Given the dimensions of it all, putting in firebricks is just about

possbile
but undesirable to to relative thickness and the 'buff' colour most

seem to
be. I dont' want to start taking too much of the old brickwork out and
fiddling as I'm not an experienced builder and don't fancy the whole

chimney
stack on my head.

I'm guessing most glazed tiles would get damaged by heat, even if

there is a
couple of inches clearance between fire and tiles. Quarry tiles might
survive it but its not very appealing visually.

Os what I'm now looking at doing is possible going for 1cm thick

unglazed
slate tiles on top of a good thick layer of limed mortar - anyone know

how
good these are in repeated exposure to heat? Failing that I might try
trawling round a few stonemerchants for basalt based thin tile-shaped
stonework.

The plumber also said you can get some sort of heat resistant

plasterboard,
but I've yet to find any in the sheds.

Anyone had experience of this sort of thing?


How about a nice cast iron fireplace?
Alternatively, you can buy something called "scones" which are like
thin bricks (3-4 cm) which can be laid on edge - making a slightly
thinner wall than traditional fire bricks. Still stuck with the buff
colours though.

Fireplace building is a black art and I would recommend googling in
uk.d-i-y for information about it to ensure your fire works
efficiently and safely.

Alan.



Nother option is sheet metal, eg copper. Sheet metal should have a gap
from the bricks, and a gap at base to allow air in and up. Copper
conducts well so you dont want it stuck on the bricks.

Re colour, you can make buff bricks black, and it looks entirely in
keeping with a fireplace. Or get used black firebricks.

Regards, NT



Thanks for ideas - hadn't really considered metal up till now as was a bit
worried about conductive properties firing shedloads of heat straight onto
the bits where it connects to wall - I'm sure its overcomable with a bit of
clever insulation though. Will add metalworkers to list of possibles though.
thanks.


no you need airflow behind to cool it, insulations no use.

Which leads to followup question - how do I go about blacking whatever I put
up to make it look like smokestains? Or do I just get a load of old soot and
rub it on?


If it wont get hot, black stain probably (not tried it tho), or just
get used sooted black ones.


Regards, NT