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What
to know about CHIMNEY FIRES !
As you snuggle in
front of a cozy fire or bask in the warmth of your wood stove,
you are taking part in a ritual of comfort and enjoyment handed
down through the centuries. The last thing you are likely to be
thinking about is the condition of your chimney. However, if you
don't give some thought to it before you light those winter
fires, your enjoyment may be very short-lived. Why? Dirty
chimneys can cause chimney fires, which damage structures,
destroy homes and injure or kill people.
Chimney fires can
burn explosively - noisy and dramatic enough to be detected by
neighbors or passersby. Flames or dense smoke may shoot from the
top of the chimney. Homeowners report being startled by a low
rumbling sound that reminds them of a freight train or a low
flying air plane. However, those are only the chimney fires you
know about. Slow-burning chimney fires don't get enough air or
have enough fuel to be as dramatic or visible. But, the
temperatures they reach are very high and can cause as much
damage to the chimney structure - and nearby combustible parts
of the house - as their more spectacular cousins. With proper
chimney system care, chimney fires are entirely preventable.
CREOSOTE
& CHIMNEY FIRES : WHAT YOU MUST KNOW
Fireplaces and wood stoves are
designed to safely contain wood-fueled fires, while providing
heat for a home. The chimneys that serve them have the job of
expelling the by-products of combustion - the substances given
off when wood burns.
As these substances
exit the fireplace or wood stove, and flow up into the
relatively cooler chimney, condensation occurs. The resulting
residue that sticks to the inner walls of the chimney is called
creosote. Creosote is black or brown in appearance. It can be
crusty and flaky ... tar-like, drippy and sticky ... or shiny
and hardened. Often, all forms will occur in one chimney system.
Whatever form it
takes, creosote is highly combustible. If it builds up in
sufficient quantities - and catches fire inside the chimney
flue- the result will be a chimney fire. Although any amount of
creosote can burn, sweeps are concerned when creosote builds up
in sufficient quantities to sustain a long, hot, destructive
chimney fire.
Certain conditions
encourage the buildup of creosote, restricted air supply,
unseasoned wood and cooler-than-normal chimney temperatures are
all factors that can accelerate the buildup of creosote on
chimney flue walls.
Air supply : The
air supply on fireplaces may be restricted by closed glass doors
or by failure to open the damper wide enough to move heated
smoke up the chimney rapidly (the longer the smoke's "residence
time" in the flue, the more likely is it that creosote will
form). A wood stove's air supply can be limited by closing down
the stove damper or air inlets too soon and too much, and by
improperly using the stovepipe damper to restrict air movement.
Burning unseasoned
firewood : Because so much
energy is used initially just to drive off the water trapped in
the cells of the logs - burning green wood keeps the resulting
smoke cooler, as it moves through the system, than if dried,
seasoned wood is used.
Cool flue
temperatures : In the case of wood stoves, fully-packed loads of
wood (that give large cool fires and eight or 10 hour burn
times) contribute to creosote buildup. Condensation of the
unburned by-products of combustion also occurs more rapidly in
an exterior chimney, for example, than in a chimney that runs
through the center of a house and exposes only the upper reaches
of the flue to the elements.
HOW CHIMNEY
FIRES DAMAGE CHIMNEYS
Masonry chimneys.
When chimney fires occur in masonry chimneys - whether the flues
are an older, unlined type or are tile lined to meet current
safety codes - the high temperatures at which they burn (around
2000' F) can "melt" mortar, crack tiles, cause liners to
collapse and damage the outer masonry material. Most often,
tiles crack and mortar is displaced, which provides a pathway
for flames to reach the combustible wood frame of the house. One
chimney fire may not harm a home. A second can burn it down.
Enough heat can also conduct through a perfectly sound chimney
to ignite nearby combustibles.
Pre-fabricated,
factory-built, metal chimneys. To be installed in most
jurisdictions in the United States, factory-built, metal
chimneys that are designed to vent wood burning stoves or pre-
fabricated metal fireplaces must pass special tests determined
by Underwriter's Laboratories (U.L.). Under chimney fire
conditions, damage to these systems still may occur, usually in
the form of buckled or warped seams and joints on the inner
liner. When pre-fabricated, factory-built metal chimneys are
damaged by a chimney fire, they should no longer be used and
must be replaced.
WAYS TO KEEP
THE FIRE YOU WANT... from Starting One You Don't!
Chimney fires don't
have to happen. Here are some ways to avoid them:
-
Use seasoned
woods only (dryness is more important than hard wood versus
soft wood considerations)
-
Build smaller,
hotter fires that bum more completely and produce less smoke
-
Never burn
cardboard boxes, wrapping paper, trash or Christmas trees;
these can spark a chimney fire
-
Install
stovepipe thermometers to help monitor flue temperatures
where wood stoves are in use, so you can adjust burning
practices as needed
-
Have the
chimney inspected and cleaned on a regular basis
PROPER MAINTENANCE
Clean chimneys don't catch fire.
Make sure Chimney Solutions inspects your solid fuel venting
system annually, and cleans and repairs it whenever needed.
Your sweep may have other
maintenance recommendations depending on how you use your
fireplace or stove.
CSIA recommends that you call on
certified chimney sweeps, since they are regularly tested on
their understanding of the complexities of chimney and venting
systems .
Signs that You've Had a
Chimney Fire
Since chimney fires
can occur without anyone being aware of them ... and since
damage from such fires can endanger a home and its occupants,
how do you tell if you've experienced a chimney fire?
Here are the signs
a professional chimney sweep looks for:
-
"puffy"
creosote, with rainbow colored streaks, that has expanded
beyond creosote's normal form
-
warped metal of
the damper, metal smoke chamber, connector pipe or
factory-built metal chimney
-
cracked or
collapsed flue tiles, or tiles with large chunks missing
-
discolored and
distorted rain cap
-
creosote flakes
and pieces found on the roof or ground
-
roofing
material damaged from hot creosote
-
cracks in
exterior masonry
-
evidence of
smoke escaping through mortar joints of masonry or tile
liners
If you think a
chimney fire has occurred, call Chimney Solutions for a professional evaluation. If
your suspicions are confirmed, a certified sweep will be able to
make recommendations about how to bring the system back into
compliance with safety standards. Depending on the situation,
you might need a few flue tiles replaced, a relining system
installed or an entire chimney rebuilt. Each situation is unique
and will dictate its own solution.
What to Do if You Have a
Chimney Fire
If you realize a chimney fire is
occurring, follow these steps:
1) Get everyone out of the
house, including yourself
2) Call the fire department
If you can do so without risk to
yourself, these additional steps may help save your home.
Remember, however, that homes are replaceable, but lives are
not:
-
Put a chimney fire
extinguisher into the fireplace or wood stove
-
Close the glass doors on
the fireplace
-
Close the air inlets on the
wood stove
-
Use a garden hose to spray
down the roof (not the chimney) so the fire won't spread to
the rest of the structure
-
Monitor the exterior
chimney temperature throughout the house for at least 2 or 3
hours after the fire is out
More
information
We
service all of Johnson County, Kansas City Missouri, Northland KCMO,
Lee´s Summit, Blue Springs, Desoto, Shawnee Mission, Lenexa and
everywhere in Between. |
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