How Not To Install a Wood Burning Stove
A poorly   installed wood-burning stove will not only cost you more in the long-term, it   can also put your life and the lives of your loved ones at risk.

If common sense   doesn’t dictate getting the job done properly, that sobering thought ought   to. It’s not the sort of thing to be messing around with on a DIY basis.

To emphasise the   point, here are a few horror stories we’ve recently seen of wood-burning   stoves that have been installed incorrectly, and often dangerously. In many   instances we have refused to sweep these unsafe appliances.

 

Register   plate

The register   plate sits at the top of the fireplace / bottom of the chimney. It has a dual   purpose: to stop anything from falling down the chimney and to stop flue   gases from coming back down the chimney and into your room.

The preferred   material to use is steel, but some unscrupulous installers use chipboard. It   ought to go without saying that using something combustible as a safety   measure around a stove is not best practice.

 

Chimney   liner

Installing a   chimney liner is one of the more straightforward aspects of stove   installation. The only thing you really need to remember is to put it the   right way up. But we’ve heard tales of supposedly professional installers who   managed to complete the job with an upside down chimney liner.

 

Carbon   monoxide

Leaks in your   flue or poor connections at any point in your heating system can result in   carbon monoxide being released in your room. It’s hardly necessary to   emphasise how tragic the results can be in those circumstances.

 

Back wall   problems

According to   building relations, your stove should be fitted at least 50mm away from the   wall behind it, assuming that wall is non-combustible. Cowboy installers   often breach this regulation or meet the measurement requirements but still   endanger life by using or not altering a combustible material in the back   wall.

 

Building   regulation breaches

Work that hasn’t   been completed by a HETAS registered installer has to be signed off by your   local authority to confirm it meets building regulations. Unfortunately, many   people pay an unregistered installer. When they get the local authority in to   check the work (at a cost), it doesn’t meet building regulations.

They either   can’t track down the person who did the work or can’t convince them to   return, and they’re faced with the prospect of paying for the work to be done   all over again.

When coming to   sell a home with a stove many buyers are now asking for proof of installation   by HETAS installers, without the correct certificates your sale may be   delayed.

ProSweep doesn’t   install stoves, but we always advise our customers to use a Hetas-registered   installer. It’s the safest and often ultimately the cheapest way to install a   wood-burning stove.

 

The advantage of   getting your chimney swept during the summer is that if we see any dangerous   installation there is time to rectify this before the winter season starts.   If you leave it too late you may not be able to rectify these faults before   time to light your stove, remember many insurance companies will no longer   pay out on chimney fires caused by non sweeping or installs that do not meet   building regulations.