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Firewood, Heating and Wood Burning Equipment
Wood stove "puffing"
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<blockquote data-quote="logbutcher" data-source="post: 894312" data-attributes="member: 4440"><p>The roof is like a wing, eddying winds on low pressure days down any flue. </p><p>Keep the flue pipe at least 3 feet above the roof AND be sure that it is at least 10 feet from any roof surface from the 3 feet top. Roofs are like whitewater running making currents go where you don't expect them.</p><p></p><p>Surrounding trees can "push" wind around-trim. </p><p></p><p>But then on those low barometric pressure days, with warmer temps above freezing-- for us in the northern climes-- sometimes any flue will back puff at times. Low fires keeping the flue cool will make it easier for those puffs.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="logbutcher, post: 894312, member: 4440"] The roof is like a wing, eddying winds on low pressure days down any flue. Keep the flue pipe at least 3 feet above the roof AND be sure that it is at least 10 feet from any roof surface from the 3 feet top. Roofs are like whitewater running making currents go where you don't expect them. Surrounding trees can "push" wind around-trim. But then on those low barometric pressure days, with warmer temps above freezing-- for us in the northern climes-- sometimes any flue will back puff at times. Low fires keeping the flue cool will make it easier for those puffs. [/QUOTE]
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