GREAT TURKEY VIDEO BY THE WAY! nice shot with a bow. I have another channel that ive been working at for a few years "rogers rigs" icefiishing, fishing, fileting, meat packing etc. check it out if you want another rabbit hole to explore! :-) ruclips.net/channel/UCtl0VZSmB64uzoR4nLXn9EQ
What a great video. This man is incredibly skillful and incredibly generous for sharing his skills with us. It's refreshing to see someone who still excells in their field of work. There are too many underachievers out there nowadays. Maybe it's just because I'm getting old, but nowadays truly skilled craftsmen are few and far betweem. I learned a lot from this video.
This is the best process breakdown, tips and tricks video for putting a pro crown on a stone chimney out there. The video was extremely well done and the commentary was natural, funny and always on point.
THANK YOU! We are trying to make some more like it to build up this channel. I really appreciate the positive feedback. please share it with anyone who it might help. thanks again!
Its so unfortunate that chimneys and and fireplaces have fallen into less favour these days. Electricity and gas resources, prices… people need to be able to break from relying on resources they can’t obtain themselves
Thank you very much for the video for your professionalism and for donating Al your time and showing your experience to us we have a better vision of doing a good job thank you very much
Spreading knowledge is like lighting a candle. Lighting a second candle from a first, does not diminish the first candles flame, there is just more now. Thank you for sharing your knowledge. - knowledge weighs nothing, carry all you can
Excellent video. Excellent job. Great to see someone taking pride in their work and passing on numerous valuable tips for excellence. Not rushing through the job to “get it over with” like many will do.
This is a great video! You covered every single thing (and then some) of how I will be forming my cap on a brick chimney. Incredible. Years of wisdom and experience in a relatively short video. Thank you!!
Glad very it was helpful! I've wanted to make this vid for a while. please share it too. you will have an easier time on a brick chimney, you can even skip the ratchet strap trick and just screw the first 2 2x4s into the mortar joints. rather than packing the cracks with mortar the night before like we did here, you can just use a little silicone caulk to seal the form from leeking on most brick chimney forms. i guess i should do a brick chimney cap vid. thanks for watching and i hope your cap turns out well. please like and subscribe. ive already recorded a dozen more how to masonry vids, just have not had the time to edit 'em and get them up. its our busy masonry season right now so we gotta make hay while the sun shines! -roger
Rarely comment, but you just straight up deserve to know how good of a video this is. Most DIY videos i watch I'm learning from some crusty old dude who doesn't care about his work, you legitimately seem to care! Masonry is becoming a lost art and your guys do it proud. Wish you were closer to WA state to do my mess of a chimney!
THANKS SOREN! that is exactly what i am hoping to do. pass the lost arts of the trades on to the next generation the last gen got skiped. working with your hands was considered demeaning and now it seems like people are realizing that they gotta know this stuff. i hope to compile some more of my buddies who work in the trades and make this a real headquarters of building and fixing homes. I also have a fishing channell "rogers rigs" and im trying to teach the art of catching cleaning and cooking your own dinner over there. youtube is a really intresting platform and my family has had a lot of fun with it. if you have any pics of your chimney i'd be glad to take a look! thanks again ROger
A great teaching vid from a guy who clearly knows what he's doing. While I try to never turn away work to do myself, the shear expertice demonstrated the value of hiring top pros like this guy.
THANK YOU Adam, We are gonna make a bunch more vids this spring. we just unfroze from the winter. i have another channel on outdoor activities (rogers rigs) if you are intrested
I watched this video no less than 5 times and today I took the forms off my 3 flue chimney cap and viola. No pock marks, cracks, no leakage from the forms, and no trouble removing the quarter round. I'm a complete amateur and following this video carefully lead me.tova successful and professional result. Thanks a lot!
That is Great to hear Adam! Im glad it all worked perfectly. thanks for watching! we are making more vids soon. finally getting back int tha masonty season here in northern NY
This is BY FAR the most comprehensive and informative video on this subject we’ve found. Thank you for doing such a thorough job on both the cap and video explanation of the process (how and why) 👍
Scott- I'M Glad it was helpful! thank you for watching! Please sub and share. If you are working on a chimney cap and run into any issues, feel free to ask. I will do my best to help. -Roger
@@TheHowToHeadquarters it just so happens I do have a question. What product would you recommend to patch a cap. I need to adhere to existing cement. Pics available if needed.
sorry i replied but it must not have posted. patching a cap does not always work. if a crack formed, it is from movement and it will likely move again and a parge on cap will probly crack. but that being said I would probably use a fibered waterproofing mortar like blockbond and apply it to a moist clean concrete cap as smoothly as can be. then spray the cured cap with aqua pel or another waterproofer. an easier and maybe more effective route is to caulk the cracks with Lexal or another hi performance flexible caulk. the lexal is likely to expand and contract with the crack and keep water out, but the weather and sun will break down even the best caulks in a few years. I hope this helps. sorry i did not get bck faster. send a pic or lmk where you are at with the project. roger
What a great video. I really like your style, how you explain things and the details you go into. I have a cracked chimney crown/cap here with my stone-built cottage in Scotland and this was really amazingly helpful to get me clued on how I might approach it. I never sign into RUclips, but felt compelled to say thanks to you for taking the time to put this video togther. Rock on...
I'm glad it was helpful! Thank you for the encouraging words. it is really neat to think of one of these caps showing up in Scotland. My father taught me this method. let me know if you run into any questions!
Thanks for this how to video. I'm bout to re tuck point my old chimney and put a actual cap on. I have some anxiety about actually doing a good job. Appreciate it.
The hint about using fiberglass was fabulous! I used an old sawzall blade to poke it down in. Great explanation of steps. Thank you for taking the time to make this. It was the best of all that I watched.
Thanks for watching Jim! yep i learned the fiberglass trick from a longtime mason and it really does workreally well! we have a bunch more how to vids on masonry tricks on the channel. let me know if you think of another topic we should cover. thanks again -Roger
Thanks Chris. i tried to keep full roof shots to a minimum so my wkman's comp insurance doesn't go up. but there was a flat porch roof at the bottom. :-) thanks for watching Chris
Thank you I'm C.S.I.A. certified but, before becoming certified I had zero hands on experience, after watching this I feel confident in my abilities to pour a crown.
@@TheHowToHeadquartersBrick chimney with easy access to 3 sides. I used the technique you showed for stone making a floating support for the form using a ratchet strap instead of screwing a base board into the mortar. I put in a drip edge in the overhang with 1/4 round, but I glued and nailed the strips down instead of cabinet screws. I had time to wait for the glue to dry and an air nailer handy so it made quick work. 6.5’ x 2.5’ chimney so it took 560 pounds of concrete to make the cap. It never budged! You covered everything crucial. Can’t think of anything more worth adding Cheers 🍻
@@TheHowToHeadquarters Great tips in this video. Couple of questions, the z shaped, galvanized block reinforcing wire ... do you pull it up off bottom of the form an inch? How come no form release? If you were to use sill seal as an expansion joint, have you tried using crown coat to avoid going back on top? I think your idea of using 1/4 round to create a drip channel on bottom or cap is fantastic, I live in Michigan and we have the freeze thaw cycle going daily in the winter and water working its way under the cap/crown into the rows of brick underneath have reaked havoc on my chimneys. The other idea of using a cordless hammer drill to vibrate the form walls is a great trick. I didn't realize how much that would help, great camera work to show that. If you were local contractor, I would be happy to have you do work for me.
Thanks Roger , the chimney in your demo looks exactly like mine, I never thought of doing the cap like yours , but it seems it would cure all my problems and bind the top 3 layers of brick together almost like a collar, by the way the videos are well explained well done , its better than watching TV
@@TheHowToHeadquarters THANKS jOHN WILL DO ,AND iLL LET YOU KNOW HOW IT WORKS OUT , SO GLAD i FOUND YOUR SITE AS i LL BE DOING MORE CEMENT WORK DOWN THE LINE
Thank you for your informative video. I have a rock chimney like in this video. Your step-by-step video gave me the information and confidence to undertake this task. The insulation between the rocks was brilliant! Worked like a charm. Mine doesn't look as great as yours, but I'm an amateur. Thank you!
Hey Roger forgot to reply about my finished chimney cap, well it went perfect, actually did a 2 stage step up on the crown as the brick work was splayed so doing a double step hid the broken bricksand and it looks really cool and stands out as a great feature on the roof, even the neighbors complimented on the design thank you so much for the education
Mason here. Pouring a cap tomorrow. I put flashing under mine. This would be difficult to flash under it it is just big enough to be annoying.. You could caulk the cap to the flu after you strip the form. There will be a slight crack there in time. I make a drip ledge with a router. I kinda like your method better. Thinking regardless I will make my drip edges more pronounced. I have a Makita 18v vibrator but your method works good too. A bushing hammer on a hammer drill would be good. I am on this job using PVC board for my walls. They are super smooth. I may have to reinforce them. Everything in your video was extremely solid advice. I was very impressed with it.
THANK YOU! yep we us flashing or metal roofing somtimes if the space is bigger. and good point on the caulk. i love using the pvc when we make curved forms. THANKS FOR WATCHING! I'll have more vids coming out soon. we are still frozen in up here in northern NY
Excellent informative video sir. I grew up in your area and had a house on the Okara Lakes and don’t miss the winters one bit . Another great way to make the chimney last which is far less labor intensive is to add 24-26 gauge metal chase covers to them . I have them constructed by a local metal fab shop. The initial cost is a little more more but far less maintenance in the long run and better protection from the elements. I’d also suggest sticking with Stainless Steel rain caps versus those powder coat steel ones as they rust out quickly and leave bleed stains down the chimney . I’ve been in this industry for 22 years and give the customers both options if it’s an existing chimney . If I am building a new cultured/natural stone chimney my only option is metal chase covers .
This is a really great video for people. I especially like the fiberglass with mortar and hammer drill trick. Those will both come in handy for us. We tried a few different ways of creating a drip edge. Our favorite way does take a touch of practice, but when you get it, we love it. The verticle board flush with the height of the base, okay? Two cuts. ⅝ to ⅞ of an inch down from the outside top, cut straight in no more than ½" the length of the board. Then cut a bevel, leaving ⅜ to ½" of the top, down to the first cut. When done, you have two "shelves" on top of the verticle board and just have to pay attn to not having bigger aggregate in the drip edge itself. My experience says that expansion joint is still critical. We use np1 with primer. That sealant will last more than 20 years easily if applied properly. I gwt it, theres little evidence of expansion and contraction, but if ita gunna happen with a concrete cap, its gunna happen at that joint. Thanks for the tips!
@@TheHowToHeadquarters I used furniture bolt with smooth head for this application. But concrete vibrator is better and you can stick it into tight spaces also.
This looks great, but from what I've seen, there should be a 1/2 gap between the flue and the concrete. Otherwise the expansion of the flue will crack the concrete.
@@TheHowToHeadquarters yes actually I could use some advice. My chimney is cinderblock with a row of brick and then a mortar slope. 1 inch overhang on brick. No drip edge. Mortar is terrible and falling apart. Underneath it looks like some kind of drywall that was used as base of mortar sloping to cover cavity on either side of chimney. Some other top bricks are very loose. Do I rejoint the existing brick and pour this type of concrete cap on top on top or remove the brick (larger cavity if so). If I remove the brick what do you think I should use to support the wet concrete over the cavity on either side of the chimney? Plywood? Cement board?
@@TheHowToHeadquarters thanks, I actually already did the work two weekends ago. Just ended up using cement board over the cavities. Waited a week to take the form off over this past weekend. It looks great!
Been doing it only ten years, but my old sensei taught me an AMAZING way to do these in less than a few hours. You grab some 2x6 3-ply luons and measure in 1/4" or 1/2" if necessary from each outer edge. Gorilla tape any leftover disparity. You screw the luons into some surrounding 2x4s or 2x6 and then sit it right on top, grid wire and pour. Should allow for a 1" drip edge on each side and I've done concrete crowns in 2 hours no bullshit man.
Ok Roger , now I see another reason why we’ve connected beyond the love of fishing, hunting and just enjoying being in Gods creation. I am by no means a stone mason and have had some bad experiences with some but I love working with stone and building stone walls and even though I’m a bit of a hack, I’ve always felt working with stone was good for the soul. Glad you commented on my video via this channel, your teaching style whether it’s catching perch or capping a chimney is always as informative as it is entertaining. Thanks, Don
Yep. I cant wait to meet you and fish in person! the 7 mile long lake i live on is completely iced over as of today. so we are getting closer! My Dad taught me masonry. (after I spent 4 years in business college) He was a Forest Ranger in NY but always did masonry on the side. now i have 3-5 employees every summer and we build like crazy until about November and then take the winter off. My wife and i are homeschooling so winters are a different kind of busy and i'm trying to supplement some with youtube/rogersrigs stuff, but its mostly for fun. Yes on stone for the soul. i was looking at the old walls in the woods that you passed by while tracking that deer last week. thinking about the guys (or kids) who built those walls and cleared fields.
Nice on the ice over your way. We were just starting to see ice on some of the smaller ponds / lakes locally and then we got hit with 40” of snow in yesterday’s big storm . That is really gonna mess up the ice fishing for a while around here I’d say. I’m always amazed how our forefathers built the miles and miles of rock walls that criss cross the hills here in the Northeast. Hardy men settled this land way back when, that’s for sure. Have a good weekend.
Thanks for this video. Legit never poured or formed a cap before, totally winged it just following this video, came out great and I made a grand in a few days, thanks jeff
THAT is great to hear! i was hoping this would be enough to do it all as long as you have some basic skills. I supported my family for years dong this. and once people know you do this, you could get LOTS of chimney capping and chimney flashing jobs. please check out our channel for more how tos and if you ever run into a question, id be glad to help
@@TheHowToHeadquarters I have a lot of questions I will hope to be answered in some of your other videos I watch. I've been in masonry for five years now between restoration and new build, attempting to go on my own for a bit and it's sometimes hard to find good info from guys who do good work, between you and Mike's videos I've learned a bit already
JEFF, You are in a good business! masons are in limited supply and the demand is High. I'd love to help in any way i can. and Mike's vids are a great way to learn too. what area do you live in?
Love the video. Thanks for taking the time for a detail lecture. This was'nt tips for the job, it was a short class of great detail. Thanks for the knowledge of what and what not to do for the best crown.
Yes. I am. Your video was really helpful and after watching it I decided to do it myself. I was off yesterday for the election so I built the forms and did all the cement myself. When I get home later today I’m gonna remove the forms. 🤞
NICE! depending on your climate. you may want to wait another day to remove the form. if it is cool and wet, 24 hours may not be enough time to cure fully and you could chip off corners taking off the form. (ive made that mistake a few times) if you have taken it off already, let me know how it is! I' love to see a pic. according to the comments about 6 people have capped their own chimneys from this vid!
Would’ve been nice to find this a week ago, lol. I ended up using quick release clamps to clamp 2x4 form around the chimney to get the width and overhang, and screwed a 1x4 to that to get the height. Used sakrete fiber reinforced concrete. For drip protection, I ran a bead of silicone around the underside about a 1/4 inch in. Hopefully that’ll help the water drip. Didn’t lube the wood. Good whack from a hammer got the form off. Turned out pretty well.
thanks for watching anyway Brock. it sounds like you found other ways to skin the cat! sounds like a successful cap. and being 4" thick will make it strong and heavy. great job!
The best video on this matter so far. I need re do mine but already have the slope but was done like you said . Whoever made just used the remaining mortar on top. I wonder if i can make similar like you did but not so thick the slap. It’s rectangular with two flue. It’s 2ft x 4ft. Would be ok i make following the slope and make 1-1/2 thick slab?
Thanks for watching Libby. if you run into any questions please ask. i check in here every day. And end pics when you get it poured. stay safe up there!
This was real good video - lots of good information. I think I saw a crack in my crown the last time a cleaned the chimney - don't know if I have the stamina to stand on the roof for any length of time; even with a Fall Harness I find my calves are just super tensed when I am on my fairly steep roof . Fear of slipping and having the screw heads on my metal roof dig into me, or just the thought that I may loose some tools sliding off the roof. :)
Roger dodger hope ur fall hobbies/chores are going well..we tare down the side boards the same day of the pour..always leave the bottom base board for a couple days but by taking down side boards 4-6hrs after pour depending on weather situation ur able to doctor up and imperfections while it's still workable..we typically use a sponge on the top and sides..flat trowel finish probably outlast sponge not sure
that is a great idea! Then any pock marks would accept the patch easier. I done know about a sponge finish, but a trowel finish is basically gone in 2 or 3 years here. the acid rain eats the surface, but with a good thick pour and some sealer once in a while, it seems to last forever-ish. I'm gonna thr the side board trick on the next one!
Great video. I love the hammer drill idea. However, I would put a bond break water proof layer directly under the cap and seal the water proof layer to the flue liners. I’ve seen it time and time again taking down chimneys where the cap has moved, ever so slightly, and dislodged the last course of brick, or it has spalled the last course of brick, all because there was no bond break. The cap will stay in place with its own weight. I’ve also seen it time and time again where the concrete expands and contracts and cracks the flue liner. This may be less of a big deal with a less thick and less strong mortared cap, but certainly with a concrete cap touching a clay flue liner I would’ve did an expansion joint. If you water proof under your cap it’s less of a deal if the caulking degrades every 10 or 20 years.
@@jakenardi8406 blueskin twf ( the yellow stuff). And seal it right to any penetrations. And also it’s a good idea to to a pre slope underneath the bond break. You could just build up the centre with extra mortar before you put the bond break waterproofing layer.
Really enjoyed this - thank you. Would you consider adding a drip edge (bell cast bead) to the lower outside edge - to further enhance shedding of rain water?
That's a great idea! it would be a bit of a time consuming detail but it would give it a rich look and im sure it would aid in tripping the water. now you got ma wondering about making a form board with a belly routed in the bottom. rather than the system i show int he vid. neat thiking. are you working on chimney cap now?
I followed your plan on my 90 year old chimney and everything worked very well. I did not have a hammer drill and used a rubber mallet and a palm sander to vibrate, I still ended up with some honeycombing on the lower edges. In retrospect I should of made the first batch of concrete wetter. Can I just patch those with sand mix or cement patch? Thanks for the video, it is the best out there by far.
Nice work! yes the honeycomb could be patched with some sand mix on a coo damp day so it does not cure too fast. the sooner the better so it is most likely yo bond with the green cement of the. yeh i should have mentioned that the first batch or 2 are best a little on the wetter side. then its gotta be stiff to make the pitch on the top of the cap. great idea about the palm sander! thanks for watching and commenting!
thanks for watching i did a vid on flashing a thin veneer chimney. a full stone is similar. if you are flashing after the stone is built, i cut in channels with a dimond blade and caulk the counter flashing pannells into the slits. if its a new project. i set cement blocks as the flashing base, flash the block, and then set stone on top. i hope this helps. here is the thin veneer vid: ruclips.net/video/NGwiWh-_XEA/видео.html
If my stone chimney has rocks laid horizontal on the top already protruding around the edge for a cap should I remove those rocks and then form a cap just like this video I think this is the way but just wanted to see what you think. Thanks
awesome! I'm glad you found us here! We have a material quarry and asphalt mill near here that we get some of our aggregate from. Does your company stay open through the winter or shut down? We have basically been frozen out here until late march. some indoor jobs but mostly ice fishing. the local quarry used to lay off for 2 or 3 month each winter but now they keep their guys busy with maintenance on the crushers and such. by the way. my buck weighed 138 lbs. it was a 8 pt a little smaller rack than yours. On Saturday buddy got a perfect twin to the one i got on Sunday that also weighed 138! we quartered them up last night and are making burger and sausage tonight.
@@TheHowToHeadquarters asphalt is done by mid December here in ohio the sand and gravel guys may stick around a bit longer than that but everybody is usually back at it late February to March I too am having sausage made of the summer variety from the deer injected with jalapeno cheese👍ice fishing is hit or miss here last year we didn't have safe ice at all.
Yummy! we are making German Christmas sausage tomorrow night. up til 1am last night finishing the burger and packaging everything. Nothing worse than getting layed off in the middle of winter and not have good ice to fish! you are welcome to try up here once we have good ice. some of the small ponds are skimmed over. the mid size lakes are usualy safe by Christmas and then Lake George is usualy good by super bowl Sunday.
Oh no! You’ve given me the confidence to attempt this job that I was certain I’d have to leave to the experts. Seriously, this is such a great video. You covered everything I wondered about (and was intimidated by). The only thing I’m not quite clear on is what sort of bit you had in your hammer drill. Thanks so much for this video. I think your thoroughness and methodology could work as a model for anyone producing a how-to video.
THANK YOU David! I'm sure you can do it. the only hard part if it is on a steep high roof. I couldn't address that accurately without losing my liability insurance :-) any bit will work in the hammer drill. I usualy use a square drive #2 Let me know if you run into any questions as you go.
@@TheHowToHeadquarters Thanks for the quick reply. My roof isn’t too steep and it’s asphalt (and sand) shingles. I’m in southern British Columbia and I’m getting to this a bit late in the season - cold weather is starting to rear it’s ugly head. I did some repointing yesterday (it’s a brick chimney). Depending on the weather, I may have to wait until Spring.
nice! brick is even easier. in fact you can sometimes screw the boards to the chimney rather than using the ratchet strap idea. sometimes a 3" deck screw will go right in the mortar joints.
I went ahead and poured, I do have some honey combing on the surface probably due to being slow getting the concrete on. Is there a product you recommend to seal this up?
Here again to ask, man its the best video ever, hey so you used only two bags of quickcrete? Is this the 60lbs? The 80 is different color not yellow right? I got also cement only. Mine cap isn’t gonna be that thick, looking to make about 2” , i just not sure if i break the old one or just pour on top of it
@@TheHowToHeadquarters Yes, who ever did it didn't do a great job, now I have to fix it, thanks to guys like you posting these vids I can fix it right.
As an alternative to wood forms over stonework, I use standard (2 1/4" thick x 6" wide) Bedford sill stones over top of stonework. Cut "drip" with grinder/wide diamond masonry blade and overhang 2" minimum (code here). Fill space with mortar/bricks/etc. to flush with top of sill stones and cover with 40m rubber roofing (bond break/flashing per Masonry Institute) and set wood forms over (1/2" bearing on outer edge of sill stones). Wrap tiles with ductwork bubble wrap then pour crown, 6000psi mix with fibers & liquid integral water repellen (rent gas barrel mixer if nec.). Silicone or RTV sealant at tile expansion gap and you're done. May need to cut new tiles to extend 2" min. (code here) with electric saw/7 1/4" diamond blade unless you have gas cut-off saw (Stihl, etc.). Wood form can be pulled same day since you want to use "stiff" mix (low slump) and sill stones support concrete overhang. Can be done in one day, been doing this way for 20+ years. Your way works too. '
THANK YOU MIKE!!!! You are the master of masonry teachers! I appreciate Your time! I know how much work goes into making a good vid and you have done A LOT of them. There are a few generations of people who never learned this stuff from their elders. We got to get it out there before its lost! And RUclips is where people go now to figure out how to do everything now! Thanks again!
After years of deferred maintenance, I'm going up on the roof tomorrow, Cutting out mortar joints, re-pointing and working on the cap. Thank you, very informative. I wondered about that expansion joint thing. Seemed like a stupid thing to do but all the experts said to put it in. Now I know why and will most likely skip it. You are correct about the leftover dregs of cement going on the top of the chimney, I think my builder ran out of Portland before he was done. last 5 courses and cap are weak and brittle.
THANKS for watching Paul. and good luck with the project. let me know if you run into any questions. i try to check in every day. is it a brick or stone chimney? Quite often the top courses weaken because they receive the most amount of water and weather. the Portland slowly is leached out and the freeze thaw works the concrete matrix apart until its just sand. I will have to make a repointing vid soon. we are going to put out a grouting vid for thin veneer application and that is a similar process. just make sure the joints are clean and a little moist when you tuck the new mortar in to insure a good bond. Thanks again! -Roger
@@TheHowToHeadquarters Here's how the day went. 1. Home depot only has type s mortar so the pointing is getting done in type s. Nearest brick yard is too far away. 2. The cap was done 6-7 years ago with type s and only had hairline cracks and a itty bitty gap where it laps over the brick. I had a part bucket of Drylok hydraulic cement and some Drylok powdered white block paint. I thinned the cement until it would penetrate the cracks then painted it with the white over the cap and down 1 course of brick. 3. The old mortar ground out easily and only 3 bricks fell out. They are cemented back in and a small amount of pointing is done. Probably would be laughed at by professionals but it looks good, cost me $18 so far and at age 65, it only has to outlast me. Thanks again and keep up the good work. Oh, brick chimney, built 1959 in north Maryland.
Great report! thank you. it sounds like you made a solid repair. maybe next summer you could spray the whole chimney and cap down with aqua-pel or another sealer. to stop up any water penetration before it starts.
You are so welcome! thank you for watching! i see you are working on the same thing, helping people to get their hands dirty and dIY! thanks for your work as well
Rebar should have an 1.5 inches underneath and on top and minimum of 1 inch it will expand and contract at a different rate than concrete so its worse then wire I like laith wire mesh for thin concrete. I have only done one of these years ago thanks for posting. Questions I have I notice you didn't leave a gap using foam on the flue is there a reason? What part of the country are you in looks like Idaho? What thickness do you think is minimum on the crown without issues? And what sealant do you prefer around the flues I was going to use butyl
Glad it was helpful! and I'm grad you found it. let me know if you run into any other questions. really the staging work is as big a project as the actual repair. we just poured a crown yesterday. is is a stone or brick chimney?
@@TheHowToHeadquarters It's brick and built around 1970. I'm welding together a section of pipe staging(1 1/4" schedule 40 steel pipe) to mate up with the store bought section I already had. Welded a pair of ladder hooks last week. The staging will be two 6'4" sections high on the front face and then planks onto the roof supported by planks on roof brackets set up on ladders hooked to the ridge. I will put up a quick video tomorrow on my channel. This is my first serious masonry project but have construction/woodwork background. If I get hung up it's good to know RUclips will save the day!
oh before you set up the staging on the shingles. we often protect the shingles with an old tarp. or if we need traction to work on we lay down an old carpet.
Great vid and you cover a lot! But, one thing that I noticed and important, is you need to "pull up" the Galvanized Wire Mesh, otherwise it will end up resting on the bottom of your pour, doing nothing to help the strengthening of the cap. It is the same idea as u mentioned about the steel rebar being encased 4 inches into the concrete on a bigger slab/cap .Thanks Great idea, the mini vibrator!
@@TheHowToHeadquarters Yes sir, welcome. I also am thinking of your , what we used to call a "keyway", or void made by 3/4 round, to discourage the capillary effect, and wondered if something could be done for the many existing caps from yesteryears. Maybe a thick run of a strong caulk just under the cap, a couple inches in ? I see the effects of this all the time, and there must be a cheap way to stop it. Thanks
Yes. i have done that with caulk. or if it is accessible, i have cut a keyway (drip channel) in with an angle grinder. Not a pleasant task, but it works.
its definitely a face mask and goggles operation, but it works. sometimes just 3 cuts and then a chistle. or a cut straight up about 3/4" deep and then an angle cut to meat it starting closer to the chimney side. a cup grinder works well here too rather than just a Dimond blade.
Roger...do you have a video of the form breakdown and a review of the final/completed job? Any chance you can post this footage? I have 3 natural stone chimney at my house (about 26/27 years old) and am looking to shore them up some and pour the same caps like the video. I've been doing my research and your video is the best one I've seen so thank you so much for that. Thanks again as well....great work. Are you close to Maryland....baha!
thanks Frederic! i failedto get the tear down footage that day. i will get some on the next job. there are a few tricks. mostly taking the screw out lostening the strap. and then tapping it slowly and evenly all around. 3 days after the pout is the perfect time. thanks for watching!!
I like a lot of these tips and will use. However the one thing he did seem to forget is the expansion joint around the flue which expands at a different rate then the crown and will likely crack the crown after a few years. Unless I missed that in the video.
yep i talked about the expansion joint. I intentionally did not put the expansion joint in due to the reality of that joint not being maintained over time and the fact that 30 feet away from the heat source the heat differential is not big enough to cause major expansion.
Great video with tons of information!! This is another project I have to do on my house, may try to take my brother into practicing on his chimney first. One tip I've heard is using rope instead of quarter round....what's your thoughts on that?
thanks Donny. rope will work OK...but it will likwly be a pain to get out after since its round and the creet can get below it. if you have a brinder you could clean it up once the form is off. but i think the 1/4 round is a better solution
thank you Im in the process of exactly the same thing, spalled bricks have decimated the look of the dchimney also the crown is compromised so I removed all the loose stuff and built up the missing bricks with cement , now I have seen your video Ill build a collar like you and make a new crown , will this work on bricks insted of stone Im assuming yes thanks a lot
Thanks Bill ! Yes this works on bricks. its even easier. you might be able to screw the 2x4s on to the side of the bricks rather than go through the ratchet strap trick. everything else is the same though. if you run into any questions, don't hesitate to ask!
Wow, great video! There are so few out there, of any type. I have a brick chimney with two flue's, one for the gas furnace exhaust, the other with a stainless liner from my fireplace insert. I have a broken 8"x8" top clay tile on the furnace flue, and the cement crown is deteriorating to some extent, but it's not horrible. No cracks really, just some flaking I guess? I was thinking of just coating the crown with crown coat, or crown seal, or some other cement-like rubberized coating, but now that I've seen this, I'm wondering if I should attempt a new crown. Wondering how you get the old cement crown off? Jackhammer? Cold chisel? Like I said, mine is all in one piece, but has some erosion happening on its surface. I had put some of that black tar like rubberized sealer on there several years ago to try to help the deterioration, but it eventually cracked and probably caused more harm than good.
thanks John, yep i would probably replace it. it is a big job, but most patches only work so far and the deterioration continues down below. most caps brake up easily with a 4lb sledge and a chistle. unless they have a lot of rebar in them. the sun breaks down most patches and recoating's sooner than you would like
@@TheHowToHeadquarters Will do! That is, if it turns out I'm brave enough to dive into it. I have a 1500.00 quote for a chimney guy to do it. I'd much rather do it myself for under 100.00, but... we'll see. Cheers!
that is not a crazy price depending on how accessible the roof is. but yes if your time is free, your materials would only cost about 100 bucks. either choice is good.
This might be a stupid question, but how do you work on the side of the chimney that faces out towards the garden? I imagine you could do most of this standing on the roof like he does in the vid, but you'd need access to the outer side to screw the wood together/make sure it's level. Do they just use a big old ladder, or do they make a platform?
You absolutely need to have an expansion joint. Otherwise, after just a few years, cracks will develop in the crown, starting from the corners of the flue tile. Oh, and did you mention a bond break? And, is that less than an inch from the outer side of the concrete to that rebar metal?
Great points Manuel. thanks for watching. I'm sure the value of the expansion joint varies in different climates and different chimney setups. as i mentioned a perfect set up would be an expansion joint that is maintained every few years. it has been my experience (with literally hundreds of chimneys) that the maintenance gets deferred and the expansion joint becomes a major liability. this liability must be weighted against the benefits of the expansion joint and those benefits decrease when the chimney is tall, seldom used or has a flue liner in it reducing the amount of temperature variation. you are also correct that conventional rebar should not be placed near the edges of a pour. this is why i recommend galvanized dura wall. it is less likely to rust and since it is closer to 1/4 inch thick, the issues that come with larger rebar applications are greatly reduced, each part of this country has its own issues with a masonry cap, but this design is a very good match for the weather and used that we face here in the the northeast. thanks again for watching and commenting. I appreciate your experience and attention to details
Yes you absolutely need an expansion joint. Yes it will maintained but the crown won't crack. Without an expansion joint the crown will crack without question.
so Roger my chimney is great with your help , but with the uncooperetive weather the crown was kind of dug up a little when covering everything up, its OK but I want to just scim it over and level it to make it perfect also I did get some pin holes formed even when I used my vibrator drill, just got a little rushed when the weasther closed in , so I wanted to know what to use to do this scim and what water repelent would you use for the whole chimney to seal both the cement and bricks thanks a lot Roger
yes that happens! thin skims are hard to get to bond and they require good weather not to hot cold or dry. I've used a product called top'n bond or a comparable squeegee application resurfacer. but in the whole scheme of things it is not a real big deal if there are some small pock marks. i like aqua pel as a spray on waterproof er.
@@TheHowToHeadquarters we're in the roofing and masonry business. Roughly 30% of our work is chimneys, and once the cap is poured there's a whole lot of tapping on the sides of the forms with trowels. Just like a wood pecker!
ha ha yes! ive doen a lot of tapping in my day! we actually poured a cap today and used my plug in hammerdrill/jackhammer. that zipped the bubbles out fast!!!!! but it almost drove the form out of whack. so you do a lot of work way up off the ground. roofing and masonry is an interesting combination! Im sure you are very busy. what state are you in? i bet you have a lot of chimney flashing tricks
@@TheHowToHeadquarters here in Nova Scotia, Canada the majority of roofing companies advertise Masonry as well. Most of us are doing chimney work for masonry along with the roofing, hand & hand to eachother. Our chimneys in these parts use lead at the base, for flashing and if it is a metal roof going on there we'll cut into the chimney and put the color matching steel flashings, backpan & counter flash. Since early 2020 when the virus hit, just about every contractor in the province got burried down with work. We've just started back up for the season
@@charliehumber6383 yep i get a lot of calls from roofers. it sure makes sense to do that work at the same time. Down here in New your state the workload has been crazy too. no wat to keep up and nobody to hire. so we just pick our jobs and make vids so people can do it themselves!
There is supposed to be a barrier, even if only a very thin barrier between the top of the chimney and the crown. A crown is supposed to "float". If it is bonded to the top of the chimney it could damage the chimney top or become damaged itself. The crown and chimney top will likely expand and contract at different rates which is lilely to cause damage. Also, I would not recommend using a flammable material if you do wrap the flue tile for an expansion joint. Use high heat ceramic wool insulation. Once the concrete hardens overnight you can dig out the ceramic wool about a half inch down and apply a high heat silicone caulk. Millpack might be better if it is designed to stay flexible. It may be prone to cracking. Check your expansion joint every year or two and add new caulk if needed. The drill trick is awesome. I was going to try my triangle head sander but the drill will probably work better.
@@TheHowToHeadquarters Had to re-do the top 3 courses of brick but I just finished pouring the cap with my brothers help about 30 minutes ago. For the next 3 days I'm going to feel like a kid waiting to unwrap my present on Christmas morning!
Nice video! I am getting ready to tackle this myself. Our cap s leaking into the house and screwed up the drywall at the edge of the chimney. My chimney is made of a kind of brick looking stone called Miami Stone. Which was made in Miami Oklahoma. My question is; I have seen several videos that advise to use something to make a break between the brick and the cap itself because they thermally move differently. Some have used a sheet of galvanized sheet metal and even some used tar paper. What material would you recommend for this? Also, would high strength concrete mix be the same as your using regular mix and adding Portland? I appreciate your time to make the video. Thanks, Tom
Hi Tom, thanks for watching! I do not recommend the break between creet and chimney material. I understand the logic behind it but the concern for water working in between that separation is too big in my mind. yes with the method I show there is a chance that there will eventually be a bond brake between stone and creet, but I am confident that since the creet wraps down over. the stone water cant come in.
thanks for the encouragement. this RUclips thing is a long slow game. i have a bunch more masonry vids that i have to edit and post. i hope to get to it in the new year
What a pleasure it is to watch someone that knows EXACTLY what they’re doing, and understands all the subtle nuances of obtaining a durable outcome…
I just went down the RUclips rabbit hole on chimney cap replacement and this is by far the best video. Thanks!
HA HA I've certainly done that on a RUclips topic before THANK YOU! if you run into any questions on your project i'm glad to help!
GREAT TURKEY VIDEO BY THE WAY! nice shot with a bow. I have another channel that ive been working at for a few years "rogers rigs" icefiishing, fishing, fileting, meat packing etc. check it out if you want another rabbit hole to explore! :-) ruclips.net/channel/UCtl0VZSmB64uzoR4nLXn9EQ
@@TheHowToHeadquarters Lol I forgot that I even had videos on you tube. That was a long time ago!
well i think it should have gotten you some more views! that is good footage! its hard to get that stuff!
What a great video. This man is incredibly skillful and incredibly generous for sharing his skills with us. It's refreshing to see someone who still excells in their field of work. There are too many underachievers out there nowadays. Maybe it's just because I'm getting old, but nowadays truly skilled craftsmen are few and far betweem. I learned a lot from this video.
Glad you enjoyed it! THANK you for the kind words!
I love when I find a pro who does quality work and can explain his work efficiently in detail. Thanks so much!
Been doing this myself for over 25 years and the drill thing is genius 😅 il try this on the next one 😂
This is the best process breakdown, tips and tricks video for putting a pro crown on a stone chimney out there. The video was extremely well done and the commentary was natural, funny and always on point.
THANK YOU! We are trying to make some more like it to build up this channel. I really appreciate the positive feedback. please share it with anyone who it might help. thanks again!
Its so unfortunate that chimneys and and fireplaces have fallen into less favour these days. Electricity and gas resources, prices… people need to be able to break from relying on resources they can’t obtain themselves
Thank you very much for the video for your professionalism and for donating Al your time and showing your experience to us we have a better vision of doing a good job thank you very much
Glad to help. thanks for the encouragement
Spreading knowledge is like lighting a candle. Lighting a second candle from a first, does not diminish the first candles flame, there is just more now. Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
- knowledge weighs nothing, carry all you can
This whole system is brilliant! And that’s coming from a mason on 18 years! Can’t wait to use this system!
THANK YOU CHARLES!!! id love to learn some of your tricks too.
Excellent video. Excellent job. Great to see someone taking pride in their work and passing on numerous valuable tips for excellence. Not rushing through the job to “get it over with” like many will do.
This is a great video! You covered every single thing (and then some) of how I will be forming my cap on a brick chimney. Incredible. Years of wisdom and experience in a relatively short video. Thank you!!
Glad very it was helpful! I've wanted to make this vid for a while. please share it too. you will have an easier time on a brick chimney, you can even skip the ratchet strap trick and just screw the first 2 2x4s into the mortar joints. rather than packing the cracks with mortar the night before like we did here, you can just use a little silicone caulk to seal the form from leeking on most brick chimney forms. i guess i should do a brick chimney cap vid. thanks for watching and i hope your cap turns out well. please like and subscribe. ive already recorded a dozen more how to masonry vids, just have not had the time to edit 'em and get them up. its our busy masonry season right now so we gotta make hay while the sun shines! -roger
Great video guys a real pro and so much info covers every base.Thanks
Rarely comment, but you just straight up deserve to know how good of a video this is. Most DIY videos i watch I'm learning from some crusty old dude who doesn't care about his work, you legitimately seem to care! Masonry is becoming a lost art and your guys do it proud. Wish you were closer to WA state to do my mess of a chimney!
THANKS SOREN! that is exactly what i am hoping to do. pass the lost arts of the trades on to the next generation the last gen got skiped. working with your hands was considered demeaning and now it seems like people are realizing that they gotta know this stuff. i hope to compile some more of my buddies who work in the trades and make this a real headquarters of building and fixing homes. I also have a fishing channell "rogers rigs" and im trying to teach the art of catching cleaning and cooking your own dinner over there. youtube is a really intresting platform and my family has had a lot of fun with it. if you have any pics of your chimney i'd be glad to take a look! thanks again ROger
A great teaching vid from a guy who clearly knows what he's doing. While I try to never turn away work to do myself, the shear expertice demonstrated the value of hiring top pros like this guy.
Thanks for the encouragement Thomas! i'll get some more vids uploaded soon
This is one of the best how to videos I've seen! I'd hire this guy in a second.
THANK YOU Adam, We are gonna make a bunch more vids this spring. we just unfroze from the winter. i have another channel on outdoor activities (rogers rigs) if you are intrested
I watched this video no less than 5 times and today I took the forms off my 3 flue chimney cap and viola. No pock marks, cracks, no leakage from the forms, and no trouble removing the quarter round. I'm a complete amateur and following this video carefully lead me.tova successful and professional result. Thanks a lot!
That is Great to hear Adam! Im glad it all worked perfectly. thanks for watching! we are making more vids soon. finally getting back int tha masonty season here in northern NY
This is BY FAR the most comprehensive and informative video on this subject we’ve found. Thank you for doing such a thorough job on both the cap and video explanation of the process (how and why) 👍
Scott- I'M Glad it was helpful! thank you for watching! Please sub and share. If you are working on a chimney cap and run into any issues, feel free to ask. I will do my best to help. -Roger
@@TheHowToHeadquarters it just so happens I do have a question. What product would you recommend to patch a cap. I need to adhere to existing cement. Pics available if needed.
sorry i replied but it must not have posted. patching a cap does not always work. if a crack formed, it is from movement and it will likely move again and a parge on cap will probly crack. but that being said I would probably use a fibered waterproofing mortar like blockbond and apply it to a moist clean concrete cap as smoothly as can be. then spray the cured cap with aqua pel or another waterproofer. an easier and maybe more effective route is to caulk the cracks with Lexal or another hi performance flexible caulk. the lexal is likely to expand and contract with the crack and keep water out, but the weather and sun will break down even the best caulks in a few years. I hope this helps. sorry i did not get bck faster. send a pic or lmk where you are at with the project.
roger
What a great video. I really like your style, how you explain things and the details you go into. I have a cracked chimney crown/cap here with my stone-built cottage in Scotland and this was really amazingly helpful to get me clued on how I might approach it. I never sign into RUclips, but felt compelled to say thanks to you for taking the time to put this video togther. Rock on...
I'm glad it was helpful! Thank you for the encouraging words. it is really neat to think of one of these caps showing up in Scotland. My father taught me this method. let me know if you run into any questions!
Thanks for this how to video. I'm bout to re tuck point my old chimney and put a actual cap on. I have some anxiety about actually doing a good job. Appreciate it.
You are most welcome @Chris Mouw. Let us know if you have any questions
The hint about using fiberglass was fabulous! I used an old sawzall blade to poke it down in. Great explanation of steps. Thank you for taking the time to make this. It was the best of all that I watched.
Thanks for watching Jim! yep i learned the fiberglass trick from a longtime mason and it really does workreally well! we have a bunch more how to vids on masonry tricks on the channel. let me know if you think of another topic we should cover. thanks again -Roger
this guy is a phenominal teacher
thank YOU! i hope this helps with your project. ive recorded a zillion more i just gotta get em up on the channel
You’re a hero. Look at the pitch on that roof! I quit anything over a 9 in my early 30s. Great work and beautiful instruction and explanation.
Thanks Chris. i tried to keep full roof shots to a minimum so my wkman's comp insurance doesn't go up. but there was a flat porch roof at the bottom. :-) thanks for watching Chris
Thank you I'm C.S.I.A. certified but, before becoming certified I had zero hands on experience, after watching this I feel confident in my abilities to pour a crown.
All the best thank you
Your videos helped me put a new hat on my chimney. Genius techniques and advice. Thanks for putting this out for all to benefit from!
Great to hear! Im glad this helped. was your chimney a stone or brick? let me know if you can think of any other topic i should make a video about.
@@TheHowToHeadquartersBrick chimney with easy access to 3 sides. I used the technique you showed for stone making a floating support for the form using a ratchet strap instead of screwing a base board into the mortar. I put in a drip edge in the overhang with 1/4 round, but I glued and nailed the strips down instead of cabinet screws. I had time to wait for the glue to dry and an air nailer handy so it made quick work. 6.5’ x 2.5’ chimney so it took 560 pounds of concrete to make the cap. It never budged! You covered everything crucial. Can’t think of anything more worth adding Cheers 🍻
thats a great idea gluing the 14 round down. then its sure to come off with the form and not get creet in the space between. great tip!
@@TheHowToHeadquarters Great tips in this video. Couple of questions, the z shaped, galvanized block reinforcing wire ... do you pull it up off bottom of the form an inch? How come no form release? If you were to use sill seal as an expansion joint, have you tried using crown coat to avoid going back on top? I think your idea of using 1/4 round to create a drip channel on bottom or cap is fantastic, I live in Michigan and we have the freeze thaw cycle going daily in the winter and water working its way under the cap/crown into the rows of brick underneath have reaked havoc on my chimneys. The other idea of using a cordless hammer drill to vibrate the form walls is a great trick. I didn't realize how much that would help, great camera work to show that. If you were local contractor, I would be happy to have you do work for me.
Thanks Roger , the chimney in your demo looks exactly like mine, I never thought of doing the cap like yours , but it seems it would cure all my problems and bind the top 3 layers of brick together almost like a collar, by the way the videos are well explained well done , its better than watching TV
THanks Bill! yep these caps really do solve a lot of problems! Good luck on your repair. if you run into any questions, feel free to ask!
@@TheHowToHeadquarters THANKS jOHN WILL DO ,AND iLL LET YOU KNOW HOW IT WORKS OUT , SO GLAD i FOUND YOUR SITE AS i LL BE DOING MORE CEMENT WORK DOWN THE LINE
Thank you for your informative video. I have a rock chimney like in this video. Your step-by-step video gave me the information and confidence to undertake this task. The insulation between the rocks was brilliant! Worked like a charm. Mine doesn't look as great as yours, but I'm an amateur. Thank you!
Hey Roger forgot to reply about my finished chimney cap, well it went perfect, actually did a 2 stage step up on the crown as the brick work was splayed so doing a double step hid the broken bricksand and it looks really cool and stands out as a great feature on the roof, even the neighbors complimented on the design thank you so much for the education
THATS AWESOME! thanks for the report. i'd love to see a pic
Hey Roger I borrowed your hammer drill vibrator tip. I used a wooden dowel in my drill...worked like a champ...thanks!
Great! that is a really handy trick!
Mason here. Pouring a cap tomorrow. I put flashing under mine. This would be difficult to flash under it it is just big enough to be annoying.. You could caulk the cap to the flu after you strip the form. There will be a slight crack there in time. I make a drip ledge with a router. I kinda like your method better. Thinking regardless I will make my drip edges more pronounced. I have a Makita 18v vibrator but your method works good too. A bushing hammer on a hammer drill would be good. I am on this job using PVC board for my walls. They are super smooth. I may have to reinforce them. Everything in your video was extremely solid advice. I was very impressed with it.
THANK YOU! yep we us flashing or metal roofing somtimes if the space is bigger. and good point on the caulk. i love using the pvc when we make curved forms. THANKS FOR WATCHING! I'll have more vids coming out soon. we are still frozen in up here in northern NY
Excellent informative video sir. I grew up in your area and had a house on the Okara Lakes and don’t miss the winters one bit .
Another great way to make the chimney last which is far less labor intensive is to add 24-26 gauge metal chase covers to them . I have them constructed by a local metal fab shop. The initial cost is a little more more but far less maintenance in the long run and better protection from the elements. I’d also suggest sticking with Stainless Steel rain caps versus those powder coat steel ones as they rust out quickly and leave bleed stains down the chimney . I’ve been in this industry for 22 years and give the customers both options if it’s an existing chimney . If I am building a new cultured/natural stone chimney my only option is metal chase covers .
great points! thanks. good point on the stainless. and the fabricated cap. do you have them make a color for the flue?
This is a really great video for people. I especially like the fiberglass with mortar and hammer drill trick. Those will both come in handy for us.
We tried a few different ways of creating a drip edge. Our favorite way does take a touch of practice, but when you get it, we love it. The verticle board flush with the height of the base, okay? Two cuts. ⅝ to ⅞ of an inch down from the outside top, cut straight in no more than ½" the length of the board. Then cut a bevel, leaving ⅜ to ½" of the top, down to the first cut. When done, you have two "shelves" on top of the verticle board and just have to pay attn to not having bigger aggregate in the drip edge itself.
My experience says that expansion joint is still critical. We use np1 with primer. That sealant will last more than 20 years easily if applied properly. I gwt it, theres little evidence of expansion and contraction, but if ita gunna happen with a concrete cap, its gunna happen at that joint.
Thanks for the tips!
wow! great tips! sounds like you did a great quality job
Hammer drill technique was genius! Thank you for sharing.
THANK YOU for watching! yep that trick is a game changer! Im glad your pour went well!
@@TheHowToHeadquarters I used furniture bolt with smooth head for this application. But concrete vibrator is better and you can stick it into tight spaces also.
This looks great, but from what I've seen, there should be a 1/2 gap between the flue and the concrete. Otherwise the expansion of the flue will crack the concrete.
I have to do a similar project and have scoured RUclips trying to find good advice on this job. This is by FAR the best video on the topic.
I'm glad it was helpful Brad! let me know if you run into any more questions as you tackle this job.
@@TheHowToHeadquarters yes actually I could use some advice. My chimney is cinderblock with a row of brick and then a mortar slope. 1 inch overhang on brick. No drip edge.
Mortar is terrible and falling apart. Underneath it looks like some kind of drywall that was used as base of mortar sloping to cover cavity on either side of chimney. Some other top bricks are very loose. Do I rejoint the existing brick and pour this type of concrete cap on top on top or remove the brick (larger cavity if so).
If I remove the brick what do you think I should use to support the wet concrete over the cavity on either side of the chimney? Plywood? Cement board?
yup i'd take off the brick and then cover the cavity with metal roofing maybe with some sticks of rebar under it. then creet cap over top.
@@TheHowToHeadquarters thanks, I actually already did the work two weekends ago. Just ended up using cement board over the cavities. Waited a week to take the form off over this past weekend. It looks great!
Great tutorial!!! This is a pure result of years experience!!
Glad it was helpful! Thank you Kenny. yup we have done about 100 of these.
Been doing it only ten years, but my old sensei taught me an AMAZING way to do these in less than a few hours. You grab some 2x6 3-ply luons and measure in 1/4" or 1/2" if necessary from each outer edge. Gorilla tape any leftover disparity. You screw the luons into some surrounding 2x4s or 2x6 and then sit it right on top, grid wire and pour. Should allow for a 1" drip edge on each side and I've done concrete crowns in 2 hours no bullshit man.
that sounds intresting. thanks for watching!
Ok Roger , now I see another reason why we’ve connected beyond the love of fishing, hunting and just enjoying being in Gods creation.
I am by no means a stone mason and have had some bad experiences with some but I love working with stone and building stone walls and even though I’m a bit of a hack, I’ve always felt working with stone was good for the soul. Glad you commented on my video via this channel, your teaching style whether it’s catching perch or capping a chimney is always as informative as it is entertaining. Thanks, Don
Yep. I cant wait to meet you and fish in person! the 7 mile long lake i live on is completely iced over as of today. so we are getting closer! My Dad taught me masonry. (after I spent 4 years in business college) He was a Forest Ranger in NY but always did masonry on the side. now i have 3-5 employees every summer and we build like crazy until about November and then take the winter off. My wife and i are homeschooling so winters are a different kind of busy and i'm trying to supplement some with youtube/rogersrigs stuff, but its mostly for fun.
Yes on stone for the soul. i was looking at the old walls in the woods that you passed by while tracking that deer last week. thinking about the guys (or kids) who built those walls and cleared fields.
Nice on the ice over your way. We were just starting to see ice on some of the smaller ponds / lakes locally and then we got hit with 40” of snow in yesterday’s big storm . That is really gonna mess up the ice fishing for a while around here I’d say. I’m always amazed how our forefathers built the miles and miles of rock walls that criss cross the hills here in the Northeast. Hardy men settled this land way back when, that’s for sure.
Have a good weekend.
Really great video. Just shows what a little care and attention can give in results. Beautiful job and very clear in every stage.
Thank you very much!
This is just wonderful. Really thorough and clear. Thank you so much.
Glad it was helpful! thanks for watching!
Thanks for this video. Legit never poured or formed a cap before, totally winged it just following this video, came out great and I made a grand in a few days, thanks jeff
THAT is great to hear! i was hoping this would be enough to do it all as long as you have some basic skills. I supported my family for years dong this. and once people know you do this, you could get LOTS of chimney capping and chimney flashing jobs. please check out our channel for more how tos and if you ever run into a question, id be glad to help
@@TheHowToHeadquarters I have a lot of questions I will hope to be answered in some of your other videos I watch. I've been in masonry for five years now between restoration and new build, attempting to go on my own for a bit and it's sometimes hard to find good info from guys who do good work, between you and Mike's videos I've learned a bit already
JEFF, You are in a good business! masons are in limited supply and the demand is High. I'd love to help in any way i can. and Mike's vids are a great way to learn too. what area do you live in?
Good detail.
About the only video showing the kerf relief to keep the water from coming back to the brick face.
Excellent video Roger! Another use for the impact drill, liked that.
Thanks for watching Aaron. hope your block project is moving despite this rain.
Love the video. Thanks for taking the time for a detail lecture. This was'nt tips for the job, it was a short class of great detail. Thanks for the knowledge of what and what not to do for the best crown.
Glad it was helpful! and thanks for watching! i appreciate the encouragement
I use a flat-head 6inch nail in the drill. Quick, easy to lay your hands on, and no damage to the timber.
GReat idea! the drill driver digs in. THANKS BJ
Looks great. Didn’t realize how steep the roof was. Thanks for sharing your knowledge
You bet! thanks for watching! yeah i tried to keep the camera angle off the steepness of the roof. are you fixing your chimney?
Yes. I am. Your video was really helpful and after watching it I decided to do it myself. I was off yesterday for the election so I built the forms and did all the cement myself. When I get home later today I’m gonna remove the forms. 🤞
NICE! depending on your climate. you may want to wait another day to remove the form. if it is cool and wet, 24 hours may not be enough time to cure fully and you could chip off corners taking off the form. (ive made that mistake a few times) if you have taken it off already, let me know how it is! I' love to see a pic. according to the comments about 6 people have capped their own chimneys from this vid!
Would’ve been nice to find this a week ago, lol. I ended up using quick release clamps to clamp 2x4 form around the chimney to get the width and overhang, and screwed a 1x4 to that to get the height. Used sakrete fiber reinforced concrete. For drip protection, I ran a bead of silicone around the underside about a 1/4 inch in. Hopefully that’ll help the water drip. Didn’t lube the wood. Good whack from a hammer got the form off. Turned out pretty well.
thanks for watching anyway Brock. it sounds like you found other ways to skin the cat! sounds like a successful cap. and being 4" thick will make it strong and heavy. great job!
This guy totally rocks! Tons of tricks! So helpful!
Thank you Kenny. if you have any specific questions, im glad to help.
You know you have tough hands when you grab fiberglass with your bare hands. Thanks for the tips!
Thanks for watching Steve. I only touch fiberglass on cold days. I don't even like to stand near it in the summer. are you fixing your chimney?
The best video on this matter so far. I need re do mine but already have the slope but was done like you said . Whoever made just used the remaining mortar on top. I wonder if i can make similar like you did but not so thick the slap. It’s rectangular with two flue. It’s 2ft x 4ft. Would be ok i make following the slope and make 1-1/2 thick slab?
AWESOME video. Now ready to go fix our chimney.
Thanks for watching Libby. if you run into any questions please ask. i check in here every day. And end pics when you get it poured. stay safe up there!
Thanks for making the video, picked up some very helpful tips
This was real good video - lots of good information.
I think I saw a crack in my crown the last time a cleaned the chimney - don't know if I have the stamina to stand on the roof for any length of time; even with a Fall Harness I find my calves are just super tensed when I am on my fairly steep roof . Fear of slipping and having the screw heads on my metal roof dig into me, or just the thought that I may loose some tools sliding off the roof. :)
yeah its no fun on a metal roof. a little caulk in the crack might buy you a lot of time.
Hey Roger - Do you add any sort of sealer on this afterward for waterproofing? Wouldn't the snow and water drain into the concrete since it's porous?
yes good point. i like aqu-pel for the sealer. but you must wait 21 days to apply after pouring. thaks for watching!
Love your videos ! Your the best! From Whistler
Canada
Thank you very much! i bet you have lots of chimneys up there
We do! And a lot of stone work to boot !
Roger dodger hope ur fall hobbies/chores are going well..we tare down the side boards the same day of the pour..always leave the bottom base board for a couple days but by taking down side boards 4-6hrs after pour depending on weather situation ur able to doctor up and imperfections while it's still workable..we typically use a sponge on the top and sides..flat trowel finish probably outlast sponge not sure
that is a great idea! Then any pock marks would accept the patch easier. I done know about a sponge finish, but a trowel finish is basically gone in 2 or 3 years here. the acid rain eats the surface, but with a good thick pour and some sealer once in a while, it seems to last forever-ish. I'm gonna thr the side board trick on the next one!
Priceless video, Thank you Roger!
Many thanks for watching!!!!
Great video. I love the hammer drill idea. However, I would put a bond break water proof layer directly under the cap and seal the water proof layer to the flue liners. I’ve seen it time and time again taking down chimneys where the cap has moved, ever so slightly, and dislodged the last course of brick, or it has spalled the last course of brick, all because there was no bond break. The cap will stay in place with its own weight.
I’ve also seen it time and time again where the concrete expands and contracts and cracks the flue liner. This may be less of a big deal with a less thick and less strong mortared cap, but certainly with a concrete cap touching a clay flue liner I would’ve did an expansion joint. If you water proof under your cap it’s less of a deal if the caulking degrades every 10 or 20 years.
Hey, I was just wondering what you use as a bond break? I used to use a thin foam material, but it's a pain to fit properly.
@@jakenardi8406 blueskin twf ( the yellow stuff). And seal it right to any penetrations. And also it’s a good idea to to a pre slope underneath the bond break. You could just build up the centre with extra mortar before you put the bond break waterproofing layer.
That makes a ton of sense and will deliver the results you expect, I'm sure.
That's a good looking fireplace.
thanks!
Really enjoyed this - thank you. Would you consider adding a drip edge (bell cast bead) to the lower outside edge - to further enhance shedding of rain water?
That's a great idea! it would be a bit of a time consuming detail but it would give it a rich look and im sure it would aid in tripping the water. now you got ma wondering about making a form board with a belly routed in the bottom. rather than the system i show int he vid. neat thiking. are you working on chimney cap now?
How thick was the first pour and how long did you let it set before second pour. Thanks and great video.
I followed your plan on my 90 year old chimney and everything worked very well. I did not have a hammer drill and used a rubber mallet and a palm sander to vibrate, I still ended up with some honeycombing on the lower edges. In retrospect I should of made the first batch of concrete wetter. Can I just patch those with sand mix or cement patch? Thanks for the video, it is the best out there by far.
Nice work! yes the honeycomb could be patched with some sand mix on a coo damp day so it does not cure too fast. the sooner the better so it is most likely yo bond with the green cement of the. yeh i should have mentioned that the first batch or 2 are best a little on the wetter side. then its gotta be stiff to make the pitch on the top of the cap. great idea about the palm sander! thanks for watching and commenting!
Awesome knowledge and video. What about counter flashing a stone chimney?
thanks for watching i did a vid on flashing a thin veneer chimney. a full stone is similar. if you are flashing after the stone is built, i cut in channels with a dimond blade and caulk the counter flashing pannells into the slits. if its a new project. i set cement blocks as the flashing base, flash the block, and then set stone on top. i hope this helps. here is the thin veneer vid: ruclips.net/video/NGwiWh-_XEA/видео.html
If my stone chimney has rocks laid horizontal on the top already protruding around the edge for a cap should I remove those rocks and then form a cap just like this video I think this is the way but just wanted to see what you think. Thanks
Cool deal I'm in the asphalt sand and gravel business so this video hits home for me.👍
awesome! I'm glad you found us here! We have a material quarry and asphalt mill near here that we get some of our aggregate from. Does your company stay open through the winter or shut down? We have basically been frozen out here until late march. some indoor jobs but mostly ice fishing. the local quarry used to lay off for 2 or 3 month each winter but now they keep their guys busy with maintenance on the crushers and such.
by the way. my buck weighed 138 lbs. it was a 8 pt a little smaller rack than yours. On Saturday buddy got a perfect twin to the one i got on Sunday that also weighed 138! we quartered them up last night and are making burger and sausage tonight.
@@TheHowToHeadquarters asphalt is done by mid December here in ohio the sand and gravel guys may stick around a bit longer than that but everybody is usually back at it late February to March I too am having sausage made of the summer variety from the deer injected with jalapeno cheese👍ice fishing is hit or miss here last year we didn't have safe ice at all.
Yummy! we are making German Christmas sausage tomorrow night. up til 1am last night finishing the burger and packaging everything.
Nothing worse than getting layed off in the middle of winter and not have good ice to fish! you are welcome to try up here once we have good ice. some of the small ponds are skimmed over. the mid size lakes are usualy safe by Christmas and then Lake George is usualy good by super bowl Sunday.
@@TheHowToHeadquarters I'll keep it in mind👍
Oh no! You’ve given me the confidence to attempt this job that I was certain I’d have to leave to the experts. Seriously, this is such a great video. You covered everything I wondered about (and was intimidated by). The only thing I’m not quite clear on is what sort of bit you had in your hammer drill. Thanks so much for this video. I think your thoroughness and methodology could work as a model for anyone producing a how-to video.
THANK YOU David! I'm sure you can do it. the only hard part if it is on a steep high roof. I couldn't address that accurately without losing my liability insurance :-) any bit will work in the hammer drill. I usualy use a square drive #2 Let me know if you run into any questions as you go.
@@TheHowToHeadquarters Thanks for the quick reply. My roof isn’t too steep and it’s asphalt (and sand) shingles. I’m in southern British Columbia and I’m getting to this a bit late in the season - cold weather is starting to rear it’s ugly head. I did some repointing yesterday (it’s a brick chimney). Depending on the weather, I may have to wait until Spring.
nice! brick is even easier. in fact you can sometimes screw the boards to the chimney rather than using the ratchet strap idea. sometimes a 3" deck screw will go right in the mortar joints.
excellent presentation and insight. many thanks from CHESTERTOWN !!
Glad you enjoyed it! thiis was filmed in C town! on loon lake
I went ahead and poured, I do have some honey combing on the surface probably due to being slow getting the concrete on. Is there a product you recommend to seal this up?
Here again to ask, man its the best video ever, hey so you used only two bags of quickcrete? Is this the 60lbs? The 80 is different color not yellow right? I got also cement only. Mine cap isn’t gonna be that thick, looking to make about 2” , i just not sure if i break the old one or just pour on top of it
so funy Roger, with the drill vibrator, you should be on tv
when i first tried it. i was whooping with excitement! it just works so well! thanks bill
Thanks for the vid, amazing trick with the hammer drill there.
Glad you liked it! thanks for the comment. are you fixing your chimney?
@@TheHowToHeadquarters Yes, who ever did it didn't do a great job, now I have to fix it, thanks to guys like you posting these vids I can fix it right.
THANKS! let me know if you run into any questions!
As an alternative to wood forms over stonework, I use standard (2 1/4" thick x 6" wide) Bedford sill stones over top of stonework. Cut "drip" with grinder/wide diamond masonry blade and overhang 2" minimum (code here). Fill space with mortar/bricks/etc. to flush with top of sill stones and cover with 40m rubber roofing (bond break/flashing per Masonry Institute) and set wood forms over (1/2" bearing on outer edge of sill stones). Wrap tiles with ductwork bubble wrap then pour crown, 6000psi mix with fibers & liquid integral water repellen (rent gas barrel mixer if nec.). Silicone or RTV sealant at tile expansion gap and you're done. May need to cut new tiles to extend 2" min. (code here) with electric saw/7 1/4" diamond blade unless you have gas cut-off saw (Stihl, etc.). Wood form can be pulled same day since you want to use "stiff" mix (low slump) and sill stones support concrete overhang. Can be done in one day, been doing this way for 20+ years. Your way works too.
'
that sounds like a watertight system and it could be done in a day! interesting! thanks for sharing!
Thanks for all the information. Sounds like common sense information which typically means it's correct in my opinion.
THANKS for watching Cavrel! if you have any questions don't hesitate to ask!
Good video, Mike haduck
THANK YOU MIKE!!!! You are the master of masonry teachers! I appreciate Your time! I know how much work goes into making a good vid and you have done A LOT of them. There are a few generations of people who never learned this stuff from their elders. We got to get it out there before its lost! And RUclips is where people go now to figure out how to do everything now! Thanks again!
@@TheHowToHeadquarters thanks roget, I wish you success, I subscribed mike
Thank you! i'm working on a lot of new vids on helpful topics, maybe someday we ca work together!
If the opportunity arises, of course, thanks Mike
After years of deferred maintenance, I'm going up on the roof tomorrow, Cutting out mortar joints, re-pointing and working on the cap. Thank you, very informative. I wondered about that expansion joint thing. Seemed like a stupid thing to do but all the experts said to put it in. Now I know why and will most likely skip it.
You are correct about the leftover dregs of cement going on the top of the chimney, I think my builder ran out of Portland before he was done. last 5 courses and cap are weak and brittle.
THANKS for watching Paul. and good luck with the project. let me know if you run into any questions. i try to check in every day. is it a brick or stone chimney? Quite often the top courses weaken because they receive the most amount of water and weather. the Portland slowly is leached out and the freeze thaw works the concrete matrix apart until its just sand. I will have to make a repointing vid soon. we are going to put out a grouting vid for thin veneer application and that is a similar process. just make sure the joints are clean and a little moist when you tuck the new mortar in to insure a good bond. Thanks again! -Roger
@@TheHowToHeadquarters Here's how the day went. 1. Home depot only has type s mortar so the pointing is getting done in type s. Nearest brick yard is too far away. 2. The cap was done 6-7 years ago with type s and only had hairline cracks and a itty bitty gap where it laps over the brick. I had a part bucket of Drylok hydraulic cement and some Drylok powdered white block paint. I thinned the cement until it would penetrate the cracks then painted it with the white over the cap and down 1 course of brick. 3. The old mortar ground out easily and only 3 bricks fell out. They are cemented back in and a small amount of pointing is done.
Probably would be laughed at by professionals but it looks good, cost me $18 so far and at age 65, it only has to outlast me. Thanks again and keep up the good work.
Oh, brick chimney, built 1959 in north Maryland.
Great report! thank you. it sounds like you made a solid repair. maybe next summer you could spray the whole chimney and cap down with aqua-pel or another sealer. to stop up any water penetration before it starts.
Yes you need an expansion joint without question
great craftsmanship… how do u fix a cracked flu pipe ?
This in incredible!!!! Wow thank you for the fantastic video!!
You are so welcome! thank you for watching! i see you are working on the same thing, helping people to get their hands dirty and dIY! thanks for your work as well
Rebar should have an 1.5 inches underneath and on top and minimum of 1 inch it will expand and contract at a different rate than concrete so its worse then wire I like laith wire mesh for thin concrete. I have only done one of these years ago thanks for posting. Questions I have I notice you didn't leave a gap using foam on the flue is there a reason? What part of the country are you in looks like Idaho? What thickness do you think is minimum on the crown without issues? And what sealant do you prefer around the flues I was going to use butyl
i talked a little about expansion against the flue in the vid. i dont hink it is a good choice for a tall unmaintained chimney. thanks for watching!
Perfect video for me. Building staging at the moment to replace my crown.
Glad it was helpful! and I'm grad you found it. let me know if you run into any other questions. really the staging work is as big a project as the actual repair. we just poured a crown yesterday. is is a stone or brick chimney?
@@TheHowToHeadquarters It's brick and built around 1970. I'm welding together a section of pipe staging(1 1/4" schedule 40 steel pipe) to mate up with the store bought section I already had. Welded a pair of ladder hooks last week. The staging will be two 6'4" sections high on the front face and then planks onto the roof supported by planks on roof brackets set up on ladders hooked to the ridge. I will put up a quick video tomorrow on my channel. This is my first serious masonry project but have construction/woodwork background. If I get hung up it's good to know RUclips will save the day!
oh before you set up the staging on the shingles. we often protect the shingles with an old tarp. or if we need traction to work on we lay down an old carpet.
Great vid and you cover a lot! But, one thing that I noticed and important, is you need to "pull up" the Galvanized Wire Mesh, otherwise it will end up resting on the bottom of your pour, doing nothing to help the strengthening of the cap. It is the same idea as u mentioned about the steel rebar being encased 4 inches into the concrete on a bigger slab/cap .Thanks
Great idea, the mini vibrator!
thanks for watching Tom, YES i realized i forgot to mention pulling the metal up. I hope people see this comment. thanks again
@@TheHowToHeadquarters Yes sir, welcome. I also am thinking of your , what we used to call a "keyway", or void made by 3/4 round, to discourage the capillary effect, and wondered if something could be done for the many existing caps from yesteryears. Maybe a thick run of a strong caulk just under the cap, a couple inches in ? I see the effects of this all the time, and there must be a cheap way to stop it. Thanks
Yes. i have done that with caulk. or if it is accessible, i have cut a keyway (drip channel) in with an angle grinder. Not a pleasant task, but it works.
@@TheHowToHeadquarters Oh, perfect. Didn't think about a cut, if accessible, Thanks
its definitely a face mask and goggles operation, but it works. sometimes just 3 cuts and then a chistle. or a cut straight up about 3/4" deep and then an angle cut to meat it starting closer to the chimney side. a cup grinder works well here too rather than just a Dimond blade.
Roger...do you have a video of the form breakdown and a review of the final/completed job? Any chance you can post this footage? I have 3 natural stone chimney at my house (about 26/27 years old) and am looking to shore them up some and pour the same caps like the video. I've been doing my research and your video is the best one I've seen so thank you so much for that. Thanks again as well....great work. Are you close to Maryland....baha!
thanks Frederic! i failedto get the tear down footage that day. i will get some on the next job. there are a few tricks. mostly taking the screw out lostening the strap. and then tapping it slowly and evenly all around. 3 days after the pout is the perfect time. thanks for watching!!
I use my SDS with a dull bit against the form to vibrate the crete
I like a lot of these tips and will use. However the one thing he did seem to forget is the expansion joint around the flue which expands at a different rate then the crown and will likely crack the crown after a few years. Unless I missed that in the video.
yep i talked about the expansion joint. I intentionally did not put the expansion joint in due to the reality of that joint not being maintained over time and the fact that 30 feet away from the heat source the heat differential is not big enough to cause major expansion.
Hey Roger thanks for the tips!
Thanks for watching and Hi Stephen!
Id also think using a cordless orbital sander would vibrate it enough as well.
Great video with tons of information!! This is another project I have to do on my house, may try to take my brother into practicing on his chimney first.
One tip I've heard is using rope instead of quarter round....what's your thoughts on that?
thanks Donny. rope will work OK...but it will likwly be a pain to get out after since its round and the creet can get below it. if you have a brinder you could clean it up once the form is off. but i think the 1/4 round is a better solution
thank you Im in the process of exactly the same thing, spalled bricks have decimated the look of the dchimney also the crown is compromised so I removed all the loose stuff and built up the missing bricks with cement , now I have seen your video Ill build a collar like you and make a new crown , will this work on bricks insted of stone Im assuming yes thanks a lot
Thanks Bill ! Yes this works on bricks. its even easier. you might be able to screw the 2x4s on to the side of the bricks rather than go through the ratchet strap trick. everything else is the same though. if you run into any questions, don't hesitate to ask!
Fantastic video work and very helpful.
Glad it was helpful! thanks for watching! are you fixin your chimney?
Wow, great video! There are so few out there, of any type.
I have a brick chimney with two flue's, one for the gas furnace exhaust, the other with a stainless liner from my fireplace insert. I have a broken 8"x8" top clay tile on the furnace flue, and the cement crown is deteriorating to some extent, but it's not horrible. No cracks really, just some flaking I guess? I was thinking of just coating the crown with crown coat, or crown seal, or some other cement-like rubberized coating, but now that I've seen this, I'm wondering if I should attempt a new crown.
Wondering how you get the old cement crown off? Jackhammer? Cold chisel? Like I said, mine is all in one piece, but has some erosion happening on its surface.
I had put some of that black tar like rubberized sealer on there several years ago to try to help the deterioration, but it eventually cracked and probably caused more harm than good.
thanks John, yep i would probably replace it. it is a big job, but most patches only work so far and the deterioration continues down below. most caps brake up easily with a 4lb sledge and a chistle. unless they have a lot of rebar in them. the sun breaks down most patches and recoating's sooner than you would like
@@TheHowToHeadquarters Thanks!
sure thing, let me know how it comes out.
@@TheHowToHeadquarters Will do! That is, if it turns out I'm brave enough to dive into it. I have a 1500.00 quote for a chimney guy to do it. I'd much rather do it myself for under 100.00, but... we'll see. Cheers!
that is not a crazy price depending on how accessible the roof is. but yes if your time is free, your materials would only cost about 100 bucks. either choice is good.
This might be a stupid question, but how do you work on the side of the chimney that faces out towards the garden? I imagine you could do most of this standing on the roof like he does in the vid, but you'd need access to the outer side to screw the wood together/make sure it's level. Do they just use a big old ladder, or do they make a platform?
it depends on the job. sometimes a scaffolding, sometimes ladder or sometimes i climb on top of the chimney and reach out from above.
it is a pain to work out there
You absolutely need to have an expansion joint. Otherwise, after just a few years, cracks will develop in the crown, starting from the corners of the flue tile. Oh, and did you mention a bond break? And, is that less than an inch from the outer side of the concrete to that rebar metal?
Great points Manuel. thanks for watching. I'm sure the value of the expansion joint varies in different climates and different chimney setups. as i mentioned a perfect set up would be an expansion joint that is maintained every few years. it has been my experience (with literally hundreds of chimneys) that the maintenance gets deferred and the expansion joint becomes a major liability. this liability must be weighted against the benefits of the expansion joint and those benefits decrease when the chimney is tall, seldom used or has a flue liner in it reducing the amount of temperature variation.
you are also correct that conventional rebar should not be placed near the edges of a pour. this is why i recommend galvanized dura wall. it is less likely to rust and since it is closer to 1/4 inch thick, the issues that come with larger rebar applications are greatly reduced, each part of this country has its own issues with a masonry cap, but this design is a very good match for the weather and used that we face here in the the northeast.
thanks again for watching and commenting. I appreciate your experience and attention to details
Yes you absolutely need an expansion joint. Yes it will maintained but the crown won't crack. Without an expansion joint the crown will crack without question.
so Roger my chimney is great with your help , but with the uncooperetive weather the crown was kind of dug up a little when covering everything up, its OK but I want to just scim it over and level it to make it perfect also I did get some pin holes formed even when I used my vibrator drill, just got a little rushed when the weasther closed in , so I wanted to know what to use to do this scim and what water repelent would you use for the whole chimney to seal both the cement and bricks thanks a lot Roger
yes that happens! thin skims are hard to get to bond and they require good weather not to hot cold or dry. I've used a product called top'n bond or a comparable squeegee application resurfacer. but in the whole scheme of things it is not a real big deal if there are some small pock marks. i like aqua pel as a spray on waterproof er.
@@TheHowToHeadquarters thanks roger
Top tuition thank you very much.
Great video! Thanks for sharing your tips!
You are so welcome! thanks for watching!
Awesome video! Thank you for the vibrator trick👍
thanks for watching Charlie! yup that drill will make the best looking bubble free concretework. are you fixing your chimney?
@@TheHowToHeadquarters we're in the roofing and masonry business. Roughly 30% of our work is chimneys, and once the cap is poured there's a whole lot of tapping on the sides of the forms with trowels. Just like a wood pecker!
ha ha yes! ive doen a lot of tapping in my day! we actually poured a cap today and used my plug in hammerdrill/jackhammer. that zipped the bubbles out fast!!!!! but it almost drove the form out of whack. so you do a lot of work way up off the ground. roofing and masonry is an interesting combination! Im sure you are very busy. what state are you in? i bet you have a lot of chimney flashing tricks
@@TheHowToHeadquarters here in Nova Scotia, Canada the majority of roofing companies advertise Masonry as well. Most of us are doing chimney work for masonry along with the roofing, hand & hand to eachother. Our chimneys in these parts use lead at the base, for flashing and if it is a metal roof going on there we'll cut into the chimney and put the color matching steel flashings, backpan & counter flash. Since early 2020 when the virus hit, just about every contractor in the province got burried down with work. We've just started back up for the season
@@charliehumber6383 yep i get a lot of calls from roofers. it sure makes sense to do that work at the same time. Down here in New your state the workload has been crazy too. no wat to keep up and nobody to hire. so we just pick our jobs and make vids so people can do it themselves!
I thought the cap was that metal thing your tape measure is sitting on :-) In the masonry industry what you are explaining is a crown.
true! i used "cap" for those searching on yt who had not yet heard of a crown
There is supposed to be a barrier, even if only a very thin barrier between the top of the chimney and the crown. A crown is supposed to "float". If it is bonded to the top of the chimney it could damage the chimney top or become damaged itself. The crown and chimney top will likely expand and contract at different rates which is lilely to cause damage.
Also, I would not recommend using a flammable material if you do wrap the flue tile for an expansion joint. Use high heat ceramic wool insulation. Once the concrete hardens overnight you can dig out the ceramic wool about a half inch down and apply a high heat silicone caulk. Millpack might be better if it is designed to stay flexible. It may be prone to cracking. Check your expansion joint every year or two and add new caulk if needed. The drill trick is awesome.
I was going to try my triangle head sander but the drill will probably work better.
Excellent Video! Well done sir!
Thank you kindly Bill! we are trying to make some more like it. are you fixing your chimney?
@@TheHowToHeadquarters Had to re-do the top 3 courses of brick but I just finished pouring the cap with my brothers help about 30 minutes ago. For the next 3 days I'm going to feel like a kid waiting to unwrap my present on Christmas morning!
Nice video! I am getting ready to tackle this myself. Our cap s leaking into the house and screwed up the drywall at the edge of the chimney. My chimney is made of a kind of brick looking stone called Miami Stone. Which was made in Miami Oklahoma. My question is; I have seen several videos that advise to use something to make a break between the brick and the cap itself because they thermally move differently. Some have used a sheet of galvanized sheet metal and even some used tar paper. What material would you recommend for this? Also, would high strength concrete mix be the same as your using regular mix and adding Portland? I appreciate your time to make the video. Thanks, Tom
Hi Tom, thanks for watching! I do not recommend the break between creet and chimney material. I understand the logic behind it but the concern for water working in between that separation is too big in my mind. yes with the method I show there is a chance that there will eventually be a bond brake between stone and creet, but I am confident that since the creet wraps down over. the stone water cant come in.
one of the very few videos where a lot of talking was crucial. great job.
I appreciate that! i sure have been guilty of a lot of not-crucial talking in my life! :-) are you fixing your own chimney?
@@TheHowToHeadquarters yes, but i enjoy watching non hacks. keep up the the good work and people will watch.
thanks for the encouragement. this RUclips thing is a long slow game. i have a bunch more masonry vids that i have to edit and post. i hope to get to it in the new year
Awesome video!!