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[email protected] November 23rd 06 02:28 PM

Chimney Creosote
 
Hi folks - I checked my chimney yesterday. It is an older, lined
chimney. We burn wood on the weekends during the weekends here in the
Northeast with a new fireplace insert. Probably a cord a year. I have
had the chimney cleaned every year or so. They never get much out of
it.

I looked down it yesterday with a flashlight. It had a very, very thin
coating of creosote on the liner (less than paperthin). I could scrape
it off with my fingertip). No blackages whatsoever.

Does this warrant cleaning? Pls dont give me the Chimny sweeps of
America usual line. Does it REALLY need sweeping?

Thanks
Happy T-Day


Lawrence November 23rd 06 02:35 PM

Chimney Creosote
 

wrote:
Hi folks - I checked my chimney yesterday. It is an older, lined
chimney. We burn wood on the weekends during the weekends here in the
Northeast with a new fireplace insert. Probably a cord a year. I have
had the chimney cleaned every year or so. They never get much out of
it.

I looked down it yesterday with a flashlight. It had a very, very thin
coating of creosote on the liner (less than paperthin). I could scrape
it off with my fingertip). No blackages whatsoever.

Does this warrant cleaning? Pls dont give me the Chimny sweeps of
America usual line. Does it REALLY need sweeping?


Since the residue is a small one I think you are OK specially since you
have cleaned regularly in the past. You would never expect there to be
no residue at all with a wood burning flue. Just keep cleaning it on a
regular basis.


Edwin Pawlowski November 23rd 06 03:17 PM

Chimney Creosote
 

wrote in message
I looked down it yesterday with a flashlight. It had a very, very thin
coating of creosote on the liner (less than paperthin). I could scrape
it off with my fingertip). No blackages whatsoever.

Does this warrant cleaning? Pls dont give me the Chimny sweeps of
America usual line. Does it REALLY need sweeping?


Given the fact that you were looking down, that means you were on the roof.
If you had a brush and rods it would have been done in 15 minutes. You are
probably OK for a while, but why not invest $25 to $50 and do it yourself?



[email protected] November 23rd 06 04:15 PM

Chimney Creosote
 
I will invest in the equipment. I was really inquiring because I plan
to fire her up today and probably will not get back up there for a
couple weeks. As a matter of fact, I'm firing her up right after this.

Thanks


Bill November 23rd 06 06:05 PM

Chimney Creosote
 
The fire department around here advises cleaning your chimney at *least*
once a year.


wrote in message
Hi folks - I checked my chimney yesterday. It is an older, lined
chimney. We burn wood on the weekends during the weekends here in the
Northeast with a new fireplace insert. Probably a cord a year. I have
had the chimney cleaned every year or so. They never get much out of
it.

I looked down it yesterday with a flashlight. It had a very, very thin
coating of creosote on the liner (less than paperthin). I could scrape
it off with my fingertip). No blackages whatsoever.

Does this warrant cleaning? Pls dont give me the Chimny sweeps of
America usual line. Does it REALLY need sweeping?

Thanks
Happy T-Day




[email protected] November 23rd 06 07:19 PM

Chimney Creosote
 

wrote:
Hi folks - I checked my chimney yesterday. It is an older, lined
chimney. We burn wood on the weekends during the weekends here in the
Northeast with a new fireplace insert. Probably a cord a year. I have
had the chimney cleaned every year or so. They never get much out of
it.

I looked down it yesterday with a flashlight. It had a very, very thin
coating of creosote on the liner (less than paperthin). I could scrape
it off with my fingertip). No blackages whatsoever.

Does this warrant cleaning? Pls dont give me the Chimny sweeps of
America usual line. Does it REALLY need sweeping?

Thanks
Happy T-Day


The amount of creo that comes out is an excellent indicator of the
moisture content of your wood and your burning habits (hot vs/
smoldering). Clean it out every year.


George E. Cawthon November 23rd 06 09:44 PM

Chimney Creosote
 
wrote:
Hi folks - I checked my chimney yesterday. It is an older, lined
chimney. We burn wood on the weekends during the weekends here in the
Northeast with a new fireplace insert. Probably a cord a year. I have
had the chimney cleaned every year or so. They never get much out of
it.

I looked down it yesterday with a flashlight. It had a very, very thin
coating of creosote on the liner (less than paperthin). I could scrape
it off with my fingertip). No blackages whatsoever.

Does this warrant cleaning? Pls dont give me the Chimny sweeps of
America usual line. Does it REALLY need sweeping?

Thanks
Happy T-Day

Nope, doesn't need cleaning. (Long time fireplace
and stove operator)

George E. Cawthon November 23rd 06 09:47 PM

Chimney Creosote
 
Edwin Pawlowski wrote:
wrote in message
I looked down it yesterday with a flashlight. It had a very, very thin
coating of creosote on the liner (less than paperthin). I could scrape
it off with my fingertip). No blackages whatsoever.

Does this warrant cleaning? Pls dont give me the Chimny sweeps of
America usual line. Does it REALLY need sweeping?


Given the fact that you were looking down, that means you were on the roof.
If you had a brush and rods it would have been done in 15 minutes. You are
probably OK for a while, but why not invest $25 to $50 and do it yourself?


Good point. It takes almost as much time to clean
it as it does to get up there and look. And
cleaning the stuff that falls down into the insert
is simple and fast.

November 24th 06 05:34 AM

Chimney Creosote
 
In article .com,
wrote:
Hi folks - I checked my chimney yesterday. It is an older, lined
chimney. We burn wood on the weekends during the weekends here in the
Northeast with a new fireplace insert. Probably a cord a year. I have
had the chimney cleaned every year or so. They never get much out of
it.

I looked down it yesterday with a flashlight. It had a very, very thin
coating of creosote on the liner (less than paperthin). I could scrape
it off with my fingertip). No blackages whatsoever.

Does this warrant cleaning? Pls dont give me the Chimny sweeps of
America usual line. Does it REALLY need sweeping?

Thanks
Happy T-Day


If the flue is sound and the creosote layer is truly paper-thin
throughout, try burning a good, hot fire from dry hardwood for a few
hours.
--
Make it as simple as possible, but no simpler.

Larry Wasserman - Baltimore Maryland -

Fred Wilson November 24th 06 02:41 PM

Chimney Creosote
 
Not really on this question but what about those things they sell to
through in the fire. I can get them at the farm store down the road.

Are they not worth their money?


Thanks,
Fred

wrote:
Hi folks - I checked my chimney yesterday. It is an older, lined
chimney. We burn wood on the weekends during the weekends here in the
Northeast with a new fireplace insert. Probably a cord a year. I have
had the chimney cleaned every year or so. They never get much out of
it.

I looked down it yesterday with a flashlight. It had a very, very thin
coating of creosote on the liner (less than paperthin). I could scrape
it off with my fingertip). No blackages whatsoever.

Does this warrant cleaning? Pls dont give me the Chimny sweeps of
America usual line. Does it REALLY need sweeping?

Thanks
Happy T-Day


[email protected] November 24th 06 02:57 PM

Chimney Creosote
 

Fred Wilson wrote:
Not really on this question but what about those things they sell to
through in the fire. I can get them at the farm store down the road.

Are they not worth their money?


Thanks,
Fred


Nope. Waste of money. Good seasoned wood, good burning habits and an
annual cleaning /inspection is the way to go. And your insurance
company would be happy as well.

wrote:
Hi folks - I checked my chimney yesterday. It is an older, lined
chimney. We burn wood on the weekends during the weekends here in the
Northeast with a new fireplace insert. Probably a cord a year. I have
had the chimney cleaned every year or so. They never get much out of
it.

I looked down it yesterday with a flashlight. It had a very, very thin
coating of creosote on the liner (less than paperthin). I could scrape
it off with my fingertip). No blackages whatsoever.

Does this warrant cleaning? Pls dont give me the Chimny sweeps of
America usual line. Does it REALLY need sweeping?

Thanks
Happy T-Day



Tom The Great November 24th 06 05:33 PM

Chimney Creosote
 
On 23 Nov 2006 06:28:43 -0800, wrote:

Hi folks - I checked my chimney yesterday. It is an older, lined
chimney. We burn wood on the weekends during the weekends here in the
Northeast with a new fireplace insert. Probably a cord a year. I have
had the chimney cleaned every year or so. They never get much out of
it.

I looked down it yesterday with a flashlight. It had a very, very thin
coating of creosote on the liner (less than paperthin). I could scrape
it off with my fingertip). No blackages whatsoever.

Does this warrant cleaning? Pls dont give me the Chimny sweeps of
America usual line. Does it REALLY need sweeping?

Thanks
Happy T-Day



Strange enough, you might want to contact your insurance company.
Since like you they want to keep your home safe, they might have
guidlines based on your fireplace usage, and what you burn.

Give them a call.

later,

tom @
www.NoCostAds.com



Edwin Pawlowski November 24th 06 07:57 PM

Chimney Creosote
 

"Fred Wilson" wrote in message
. ..
Not really on this question but what about those things they sell to
through in the fire. I can get them at the farm store down the road.

Are they not worth their money?


Save a trip to the store and just toss some dollar bills into the fire.



Oren November 24th 06 09:24 PM

Chimney Creosote
 
On Fri, 24 Nov 2006 09:41:06 -0500, Fred Wilson
wrote:

Not really on this question but what about those things they sell to
through in the fire. I can get them at the farm store down the road.

Are they not worth their money?


Pecos?


--
Oren

"Well, it doesn't happen all the time, but when it happens, it happens constantly."


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