OK guys, a few more woodburning related questions for this upcoming season...
1. My chimney unfortunately, is a big brick one (lined) that is on the outside wall...everything I read says the best place for a chimney is inside the envelope of the house for a better draft...it works OK for my oil burner, but how bad is this going to be if I hook up a woodstove or woodboiler to it? I really don't want a lot of smoke in the house? Besides installing a new SS one inside the house, which would be expensive, is there other improvements I can make to improve the draft if need be?
2. Heating with a woodstove. For those of you that do this, do you have problems with your pipes freezing? the reason I ask is I have a boiler with baseboard systems, but of course if I am firing the woodstove full-bore the thermostats is not going to kick on, so it won't be circulating warmth around the perimeter of the house....last time I had a woodstove I managed to "save so much money on oil" that I ended up paying the plumber a thousand bucks or so to repair the pipes after they all froze up. Of course in that old house it was poorly insulated and had no basement (just an unheated crawl space) and the pipes ran under the house....so will freezing pipes up be not a problem in a more modern house (45 y/o)?
1. My chimney unfortunately, is a big brick one (lined) that is on the outside wall...everything I read says the best place for a chimney is inside the envelope of the house for a better draft...it works OK for my oil burner, but how bad is this going to be if I hook up a woodstove or woodboiler to it? I really don't want a lot of smoke in the house? Besides installing a new SS one inside the house, which would be expensive, is there other improvements I can make to improve the draft if need be?
2. Heating with a woodstove. For those of you that do this, do you have problems with your pipes freezing? the reason I ask is I have a boiler with baseboard systems, but of course if I am firing the woodstove full-bore the thermostats is not going to kick on, so it won't be circulating warmth around the perimeter of the house....last time I had a woodstove I managed to "save so much money on oil" that I ended up paying the plumber a thousand bucks or so to repair the pipes after they all froze up. Of course in that old house it was poorly insulated and had no basement (just an unheated crawl space) and the pipes ran under the house....so will freezing pipes up be not a problem in a more modern house (45 y/o)?