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Home Repair (alt.home.repair) For all homeowners and DIYers with many experienced tradesmen. Solve your toughest home fix-it problems. |
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#1
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At what point can you close the damper on a fireplace?
Hi there I am new to fireplaces. I have a heatolator insert fireplace,
which is just great. If I close the damper (its either open fully or closed) it still seems to burn, just slowly, and no smoke enters the house. Am I supposed to close the damper before I go to bed, if there are just coals left? Or should I leave it open all night until its cold? Thanks and sorry for the novice question! Dean |
#2
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head yourself down to the library and learn how to use your stove properly.
i assume you cant use a search engine properly either... maybe check that one out too while you are there. randy Hi there I am new to fireplaces. I have a heatolator insert fireplace, which is just great. If I close the damper (its either open fully or closed) it still seems to burn, just slowly, and no smoke enters the house. Am I supposed to close the damper before I go to bed, if there are just coals left? Or should I leave it open all night until its cold? Thanks and sorry for the novice question! Dean |
#3
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don't be a **** head. if everyone followed your advice this form would
not exhist. |
#4
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randy - take your head out of your arse...
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#5
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I guess he doesn't get it, that its easier to ask than to 'pop down to
the local library and look it up'. Especially as its anonymous here so who cares if you ask a dumb question? Jeez |
#6
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funny how many people chose to attack me for giving proper advice, yet offer
nothing of their own on the subject. let me spell it out for you. you cannot learn enough to operate a fireplace safely in a couple paragraphs from short newsgroup answer to an incomplete question. looking at the replies so far, i think that should be obvious. you dont need to go anywhere. just use a search engine and search for fireplace safety. it should be clear from the question that this person needs to know a bit more about how a stove operates than simply should i close the damper at night. its not a dumb question. never said it was. there are no dumb questions. just dumb comments about the answers... randy wrote in message oups.com... I guess he doesn't get it, that its easier to ask than to 'pop down to the local library and look it up'. Especially as its anonymous here so who cares if you ask a dumb question? Jeez |
#7
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Well it was not your advice that I disliked, it was the way you put it.
Sarcasm holds very low to me. I have been researching furnaces and chimneys for a long long time now on the web. I just had a question about the particular model I have of fireplace, since it appears to have a secondary path to the chimney, although I cannot see well enough to be sure. No point wasting good house air is there? I called the makers and evern they didn't know if I could close the damper! Hence my question on google. Well, thanks all the same. Dean |
#8
Posted to alt.home.repair
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At what point can you close the damper on a fireplace?
youre an ass hat for that response. ugh
-- For full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/mainte...ce-592727-.htm |
#9
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Aren't you worried about carbon monoxide?
wrote If I close the damper (its either open fully or closed) it still seems to burn, just slowly, and no smoke enters the house. Am I supposed to close the damper before I go to bed, if there are just coals left? Or should I leave it open all night until its cold? Thanks and sorry for the novice question! Dean |
#11
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I am concerned about CO, but I have several detectors around that would
warn me. Dean |
#12
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I always leave mine open until the fire is completely out. Usually,
from a practical standpoint, this means overnight, as by bed time, their are usually quite a bit of embers still burning. I don't understand your comment about the fireplace having another path up the flue besides the passage with the damper. I've never seen that in a home fireplace and it would be a big energy waste if it were built that way. As for the CO issues, people have died in tents using charcoal grills. Given the air volumes, it would be harder to do this in a house, but why take a chance? Plus, fires that looked like they were out have been know to spring back to life hours later. |
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