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How to safely
enjoy your home fire
Easy Tips for Starting Your Fire
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Open the damper
This is forgotten more often than most people
care to admit.
-
Ingredients
You will need three things to start a fire.
-
Tinder. A few sheets of crumpled up newspaper
make the best tinder. You can also use small
twigs, pine needles, or pine cones.
-
Kindling. Large twigs, small branches, and small
splits of wood anywhere from 1/4" to 1" in
thickness will do. This is the most important
ingredient for building a good fire and usually
the most overlooked.
-
Fuel. Use only well-seasoned hardwood. If you
Don't use coal in a woodstove or fireplace
unless they are well-seasoned. Look for split,
dry wood that has been stacked several months.
Loose bark and cracks in the ends are signs of
seasoned wood.
-
Starting the fire
Arrange two small to medium sized pieces of
fire-wood on the grate, and place some crumpled up
newspaper for tinder between the logs.
Now cover the tinder with several pieces of
kindling. Be generous with the kindling - its the
most important element in starting your fire.
Now, place two more pieces of firewood on top of the
kindling and two more at right angles to these two.
Leave some space between the logs for air
circulation.
-
Warm up the flue
For fireplaces, warm up the flue by holding a
piece of burning rolled-up newspaper in the (opened)
damper region for 10-15 seconds. This helps the flue
establish a good draft. Then light the tinder.
Within a few minutes, you should have a nice, hot,
roaring fire!
- Important dos and don'ts
Do check the manufacturer's guidelines for
your woodstove or insert. Do use seasoned hardwood.
Do use commercial fire starters if you like.
They eliminate the need for tinder and reduce the
amount of kindling required. Don't use charcoal lighter fluid or other
flammable liquids. These are extremely dangerous.
(Gel fire starters are okay) Don't use coal in a woodstove or fireplace
unless there are specific written instructions - it
will burn, but not safely. Don't burn artificial logs in a woodstove,
unless they are specifically designed for woodstove
use. Artificial logs can dirty the chimney much
faster than regular wood, and can be hazardous in certain
situations. Don't burn treated lumber, trash, or anything
other than wood in your fireplace or woodstove.
Valuable Troubleshooting Hints
-
Smoke problems
Is your damper open? If it is and the smoking
continues, open a nearby window a crack for a minute
or two until the fire is going well - then you can
close it again.
If it just smokes when you light the fire, it may be
because the flue is cold. Did you warm the flue with
a burning rolled-up newspaper held in the damper
region? (If not, that usually works.)
If the chimney continues to smoke, call a chimney
professional. Your chimney may be clogged by animal
nests or an accumulation of soot and creosote, or it
may have additional problems.
-
Chimney odors
The sour, sickly odor is the smell of creosote.
The solution is to call a chimney professional to
clean your chimney and install a chimney cap to
prevent water from entering and reacting with the
creosote. Your chimney professional can also
recommend a good chimney deodorant to handle any
remaining odor which has been absorbed into the
masonry.
-
Creosote buildup
Slow smoldering fires and/or the use of
unseasoned wood can create "cool" smoke and weak
draft. Under these conditions the smoke condenses
and sticks to the chimney's interior, forming highly
flammable creosote. Read our section on "Efficient
Burning Techniques" for the solution to this
problem.
Efficient Burning Techniques
The key is to burn small, hot fires, using
hardwood - that will minimize creosote accumulation
and maximize heat output.
Keep fires burning hot with flames, not smoldering
with a lot of smoke.
Be careful not to add too much firewood. In a
fireplace, keep the top of the flames visible below
the fireplace opening. In a woodstove, keep the
flames confined to the woodstove itself.
With glass doors, keep the doors wide open with the
screen closed for a good half hour after starting
the fire. When you see the fire is burning well,
close the doors and set any draft controls.
It's better to add smaller loads more often than to
cram in a lot of wood trying to get an all-day burn.
When you're ready to put out a fire, separate the
logs by moving them to the side of the fireplace or
stand them on end in the back of the fireplace.
Close the screen or glass doors tightly, but don't
close the damper until you're sure the fire and
coals are completely out.
How to Avoid
Chimney Fires
-
Creosote is the main cause of chimney fires
A buildup of creosote is highly combustible and
can result in a chimney fire. To minimize creosote:
Burn only seasoned woods.
Do not burn trash in a fireplace or
woodstove.
Don't allow the fire to smolder.
Contact your chimney professional to clean
your chimney regularly.
-
What to do if you have a chimney fire
Get everyone out of the house.
Call the Fire Department.
Don't close the damper. If you have a
fireplace with glass doors, close the doors and the
vents. If you have a woodstove, close the doors and
the air inlets
If flames are visible at the chimney top,
hose down the roof, but not the chimney. Spraying
water on a hot chimney could damage it.
Call a chimney professional before using it
again. Even a small chimney fire can damage the
chimney, making it unsafe to use.
1998 Copperfield Chimney Supply, Inc.
Our certified chimney sweeps will be happy to assist you in safety
inspections, chimney repair, chimney reline questions or any
fireplace,
dryer venting needs.
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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