Could I have a dual Gas and Wood Fireplace?

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planehopr

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I live in a house built in 2003. The fire place has never been used. Today I had a plumber install what looks like a tube with holes connected to a gas line. it produces many little flames across the fireplace. My plumber said that this will be used to light the wood and then I turn the gas off. I asked him a few times "are you sure this fireplace is meant for wood and not those fake gas logs?" He said I could do either.

I'm perplexed. For the life of me I never heard of a dual fireplace. I don't know how to assess the situation. Honestly, I'd love to burn wood in my new house! It has a metal rack for the wood, a chain screen, and a glass enclosure just like other fireplaces. I'm nervous though. The last thing I need are dead family members or a burned down house, or smoke damage, etc.

It is 2011...My house is 2003. It is a tract home neighborhood. How do I find out definitively if I can burn wood. If I can't do what can I do to make those little blue flames look like and warm like a wood fire?
 
Contact the company that made it.

I found something...deep in one of my closets was a stack of papers...in those papers was a manual for a WOOD BURNING fireplace that looks exactly like mine. The next book was a manual for setting up gas and gas logs. It looks like the wood fireplace has been converted to a gas fireplace. But my plumber told me the gas rod he installed below the "wood" rack will be used to light the wood. He said after a few minutes the gas can be turned off.

Does this make any sense? I don't want to mess up, but I have about 5 months to figure this out :)
 
First things first, I have absolutely no knowledge of anything you are talking about.....so dont take advice from me......That aside, the first thing I thought of was why would you want a high heat source next to possibly unburnt fuel that is prolly pretty combustibule and explosive? Sounds dangerous to me....The next thing I thought was, what kind of setup is this....if the flames are close enough to the wood to light it, that means the ash of the wood will fall into the "little holes" of the gas line and plug them rather quickly.....I imagine a something like a proprane grill fuel rail, except closer to the wood and uncovered. Again causing a very dangerous situation......I wouldnt touch the thing personally, until I knew what I was dealing with.
 
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I found something...deep in one of my closets was a stack of papers...in those papers was a manual for a WOOD BURNING fireplace that looks exactly like mine. The next book was a manual for setting up gas and gas logs. It looks like the wood fireplace has been converted to a gas fireplace. But my plumber told me the gas rod he installed below the "wood" rack will be used to light the wood. He said after a few minutes the gas can be turned off.

Does this make any sense? I don't want to mess up, but I have about 5 months to figure this out :)

I've seen and used a couple of fireplaces with the setup you're describing. I don't know if they were conversions or what but they make ash clean out difficult and starting fires is easy enough without a gas line. Hopefully you can reach the company and get some advice. If I were you and couldn't get any definite answer I would either keep the gas and put in the fake ceramic logs, or remove the gas line and use it as a normal fireplace or better yet install a wood burning insert.
 
Although we make 2 different sizes of wood/coal/gas furnaces that are UL listed to burn both fuels in the same furnace and vent through the same flue I'm not sure that what you have is designed to do that. As mentioned you should talk to the manufactures customer service reps.
Your install may have been altered...verify.
 
I saw an episode of this old house where they were replacing a fireplace that had a gas line with holes in it, like your describing and said that it was used to light wood. Btw they capped off the gas line and put in an insert with blower fans.
 
I saw that episode this weekend, and that is what I understood them to say as well. The gas was used to light the firewood only. I agree with the previous, just like on the Ask This Old House, do away with it and put in a good insert. I have found that multi-purpose anything means it's not real good at anything.

Steve
 
Ya, no need for natural gas

Just a waste. And for the record, even most wood burning fireplaces don't throw the heat like a proper heater or even an insert will.

Lose the gas, get an insert with a glass front for the looking at it coolness factor, then you get the best of both worlds. If the chimney is designed for wood, should be easy enough to tell, visual inspection, maybe you can access it in the attic/crawlspace? Seems though if you found paperwork with the house indicating a wood burning fireplace, and one is apparently there, chances are pretty good it is one. Just get it checked out first and go from there.

And you better hustle *now* if you want dry wood for the winter!
 
I’m late to this response but I’ve been using my gas fed wood burning fireplace for 20+ years with no issue. I’ve had the chimney checked several times too. It works fine. I leave a tiny bit of the gas on while the wood is burning - more heat.
 
My 1926 home had a log lighter installed.
It was a black iron pipe with holes that ran under the fire grating.
The Natural Gas was disconnected in the basement long ago and I have NO Intention of ever hooking it back up.
I've got a little Jotul inserted in the niche that works quite well.
 

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