Tip from an ex roofing contractor for 20 years. Since your so close to the ridge I would put a piece of metal under the ridge and over the chimney flashing for backup. You did a perfect job, but if can keep any water from coming down to the boot from above you have way less chance of a leak later on. Right now your depending on the silicone only.
Damn good advice. In the years to come, you need to depend on something more substantial than silicone. Water will also pool there w/o a piece of metal flashing.
You should have used single walled pipe in the shop Double walled pipe through the roof You will be losing a lot of heat through the pipe that could be used to heat the shop........
Always best to have an air channel wall behind a wood stove. I have renovated homes and seen others that have the studs charred behind sheetrock covered with synthetic brick. The lesson being that heat can be cumulative in an enclosed space even if that facing layer is fire resistant. I have found a sheetrock layer over the studs or better still concrete board (real concrete not that Hardi crap), then 2x2 studding spacing out a final layer of concrete board which has an air gap at the bottom of an inch or two and an inch at the top. This allow a convection air flow to keep the area cool. A decorative finish of your choice can be added. I also like what we used to call a "stack robber" that took waste heat out of the stack and blew it across the room for even more circulation to protect the ceiling as well. If the ceiling is low it too can benefit from a double open layer to keep its temperature reasonable. Modern wood stoves can idle for long periods and build up creosote in the chimney. How much depends on the type of wood and how seasoned it is. Every so often depending on the buildup you experience it is good to open up the stove and let it burn super hot for twenty minutes or so. Either that or clean out the chimney with a brush manually as needed. A true chimney fire is something not to be experienced by the faint hearted!! High R value insulation can hold heat to a dangerous degree and needs protection from a wood stove. When it is cold out that area close to the stove can indeed get very very warm with radiant heat penetrating the wall.
I appreciate the fact that you will clarify how long it took you to do something in your videos. Too often when people post a video like this it seems like they get it done in no time flat. When in reality it has taken hours or days to complete.
Very nice. I placed the sliding stove pipe on the bottom to the stove not on top like you did. Reason being when I clean pipe I slide it up off stove and put metal or plastic oil pan under pipe sitting on stove. when running brush down chimney it falls into oil pan not stove. when done slide down on stove . All creosote in pan.
I'm sure you had a good reason why you picked insulated stove pipe for the conditioned space, but in case you didn't think about it, part of the heat exchange will occur from heat coming off the stove pipe inside, not just coming off the stove itself. By using insulated pipe inside the conditioned space, you are reducing that heat exchange and sending additional heat up the chimney and outside, rather than warming the workshop. You might consider just having the insulated cap in the attic space, but the rest uninsulated to allow extra heat to escape inside.
@@Boobtube. He installed it 100% correct. The transfer adapter secures the pipe in place and double wall insulated keeps the pipe from getting cold and pushing air downward. The adapter also secures the pipe in place for cleaning.
He installed it 100% correct. The transfer adapter secures the pipe in place and double wall insulated keeps the pipe from getting cold and pushing air downward. The adapter also secures the pipe in place for cleaning.
Are u saying use single wall pipe inside and insulated class A pipe outside???? That’s how I was always told it do it cuz the single wall pipe inside will put off more heat. My code and insurance reason u must use double or triple wall outside
A couple of years ago I saw an wood ash vacuum cleaner made especially for cleaning out fire boxes and fireplace ash boxes it was also made to handle hot ash!!! I believed I saw it at TSC IN Jonesboro Arkansas
Your insulated chimney looks like Metalbestos? If so they make a model for Canada (which has stricter fire codes) that has a thicker ss liner so it lasts longer and also thicker chimney caps etc. which also last much longer. If you have access to Canada it is much better quality as their codes require a pipe to last at a given temperature much longer than US codes. This translates into a pipe which has a much longer life before it burns out. Stainless does indeed lose material through each heat cycle and although better than regular mild steel it has a limited life. The hotter the burn cycle the more microns of metal are given off.
To late now but I know some people run those flashing gasket trims turned diamond not square so it sheds water better. Less chance of it pooling at the gasket.
This fire pit is one of a few covered pits that is on the list ruclips.net/user/postUgkxAU9pOCSV9Y5JprooHvfxTpOrt4hx8uRM of approved products for Disney Fort Wilderness. The product served its purpose well and provided excellent fires throughout the evening. We were able to open the door and do s'mores, but I had to be careful because the handle was a bit hot on occasions. Additionally, I wish they had replaced some of the standard nuts with lock nuts in some places. We lost the door handle after just a couple of days of usage. Not a deal breaker, just a recommendation. I still give it 5 stars.
i follow you for about 2 years and its so nice to see this all Have a nice and Happy Christmas and a good en Happy 2022 to you From John Lobry the netherlands
JudithB First wood stove I have seen that I like better then my old Grandpa Bear! Its now 40+ yrs old and still does a great job, plus backup cooking!! Merry Christmas!!!
Evan, that wood stove will come in handy on those cold and rainy days in the shop and it will heat the pole barn nicely and keep you warm while working. I know it was harder than it looked, but you made it look easy. Merry Christmas to you and Rebecca!
So at 2:30, seeming to me, you drilled a hold in the steel plate first, then used a chamfer bit to augment the hole just created by you in the steel, so that you could drive a 45° wood screw into the hole in the steel? If my understanding is correct, what you did to overcome a material non-penetrable issue during carpentry is quite something.
I have a similar stove in my pole barn. After a year of the stove setting on the concrete floor and having to kneel down when putting wood in the stove I purchased 8 6" x6" x 6" high concrete blocks and blocked the stove legs up 12". So much better whenever you need to get in the stove.
You only need double wall pipe where the pipe goes thru the ceiling and roof... Plus it will add to the heat in the room. & they come in 3 ft lenghts. My stove burns wood or coal, coal burn HOT
@@daveklein2826 He used 2ft sections of double wall all the way up @ 10:25.... 3ft sections are single wall and put off heat in the room. Only need double wall in the ceiling and roof. I install and clean chimneys.
Recommend a fireplace fan. It sits on top of the stove & works by the heat generated by the stove. It helps blow the heat out into the room. Just place it on top of the stove & it will amaze you by the amount of heat it blows out into that big area. No need to plug anything in or by batteries. God Bless & have a great day!
Evan, maybe a couple ceiling fans would help distribute more heat to a greater area. After I believe you said you were going to put up a ceiling.. The company I used to work for had a waste oil furnace in the hanger. It took forever to warm up after the hanger doors were open to park all the Aircraft, but after installation of four ceiling fans it was a night n day difference. Great jobs!! Love your channel and Merry Christmas ..
That is a nice looking stove and I am sure you are going to going to enjoy it very much as you do your woodworking projects etc. over the winter. Have a blessed day.
As I watch this video I think back to when you bought your property and I am so happy for you for how far your have come ❤️ Is there anything the two of you can't do? I wish I could buy some if your merchandise but I am disabled and am on a very strict budget. That being said, I make sure to watch every single one of the ADs that come up. I know you make a bit more cash and I want to support you guys for all of the hard work it is to bring us these videos. MERRY CHRISTMAS 🎄❄️☃️ Corpus Christi TX
Your video serves as a refresher course since it's been a while since I installed a stove. I've got one I need to install in the back room of my shop. I've already got one in the front section and it works great.
Hard to tell from the video but it looks like the male ends are going up but from my understanding the male end is supposed to be down. With the male end up you can end up with creosote running down the pipe and falling out and causing a fire hazard instead of being contained inside the pipe. I believe it can also affect your draft and cause smoke to come out instead of being contained inside the pipe. Everything else looks good though. Nice video.
Hi Evan from New Zealand. Another great video. That removeable brick & ashpan arrangement seems real nifty. Back in the day when we had a woodburner it didn't matter how careful I was at removing the ash, there was always heaps of ash swirling around the room.
great video. you were working pretty high up there. not sure i would have liked to do that. i need to install my extra wood stove in the garage to get some heat in there. Thanks for sharing.
your black pipe is all installed upside down, the kreasote that runs back down the chimney will leak out on the outside and cause a mess, plus smoke up the building. I hope you catch this notice before its too late.
It is double wall pipe. The inside pipe the crimp ring is pointing down so creosote runs back down inside the pipe. It is installed correctly. On the outside it looks backward. But it is the inside the counts.
Looks like a well -done install! Much better than the quick and dirty installation I did in my shop building with that old Vermont Castings stove we were given. Of course, you’re in an insulated, new building with much more polished finish than our repurposed 1950’s vintage farrowing house! Ours looks ok for what it is. Yours looks really good for anything! Merry Christmas to you both!
That is a lot of work to do get heat there but it will be freezing there soon so you have to have heat. Read your comments. Merry Christmas to you and yours.
Evan, you look like you've already installed a few of those as easy as you made it look. But I reckon you're just good at that kind of thing ... probably why that company you work for has you on maintenance. 😉 Anyway thanks for sharing it and Merry Christmas to you, Rebecca, the family and all the rest of the viewers.
Could you please put the name of the sticky caulking stuff at 14:00 on the description? I have a roof project to do in the upcoming spring. Thanks a lot.
Don't know if you can find one but, a friend of mine years ago had a Stove pipe oven attached to his chimney on his wood stove... we ate biscuits fresh cooked right in his wood shop. Mr. Ozbun was about 80 years old. And he was the one person you went to to have your hand saws or crosscut saws sharpened
You may have wanted to add a clean out section. It sucks to sweep that pipe in the winter when that roof is full of ice. And since you said you'll be burning cutoffs and those are probably pine wood you will need to sweep it more often since pine creates more creosote.
I can so relate Evan. I’m living a retired life here in the Pacific Northwest. We bought some acreage back in the ‘80s and I now spend most of my days enjoying it. Not every project I do is easy either. I check your page everyday to see your latest. Love watching.
My neighbor was going to put a woodburner in his garage. He called his homeowner's insurance co to see if a rider was required. The Company told him that they would cancel his policy if he did that. They also said if he went ahead and put it in and had a fire, they would not pay and cancel anyway.. Check ahead with your insurer for their policy regarding woodburners in garages, shops, and dwellings. Good luck and Merry Christmas.
Great place to cook on for canning etc. and also when you lose power. Some have a kettle on that's always slightly steaming because of the dry heat a wood stove creates. Next is two or more stove fans for heat circulation.
In all the time I've been following you I don't think I've so clearly seen the skill and effort gone into filming, let alone the work itself. Great admiration for you, and thank you for all the skills you share! Happy Christmas both!
I have installed many flues and I shudder at the sight of silicon caulk. Eternabond tape or caulk is a fantastic product that more people should investigate. It really is a great product.
Evan. Wranglerstar another RUclips channel has many videos on wood stoves that I found informative.....his whole channel actually. And recently he purchased a really cool fan that you place on top of your stove that moves the warm air throughout the shop. It’s really cool item , no batteries it uses a piston/ pressure using the heat. Anyway love love love a wood stove
Haven’t read comments but this was very very well done and helpful for hiring someone I will have a clue what should be done. I bet that screening is to keep bats out. Just a guess but we had bats come in our house after installing a cook stove. Great video!!
You always do such a professional job Evan. Bravo. Merry Christmas to you and the family. I hope you all have a safe and enjoyable one. Thanks for entertainment and knowledge in 2021. Cheers. Duncan.
Tip from an ex roofing contractor for 20 years. Since your so close to the ridge I would put a piece of metal under the ridge and over the chimney flashing for backup. You did a perfect job, but if can keep any water from coming down to the boot from above you have way less chance of a leak later on. Right now your depending on the silicone only.
Damn good advice. In the years to come, you need to depend on something more substantial than silicone. Water will also pool there w/o a piece of metal flashing.
You should have used single walled pipe in the shop
Double walled pipe through the roof
You will be losing a lot of heat through the pipe that could be used to heat the shop........
Always best to have an air channel wall behind a wood stove. I have renovated homes and seen others that have the studs charred behind sheetrock covered with synthetic brick. The lesson being that heat can be cumulative in an enclosed space even if that facing layer is fire resistant. I have found a sheetrock layer over the studs or better still concrete board (real concrete not that Hardi crap), then 2x2 studding spacing out a final layer of concrete board which has an air gap at the bottom of an inch or two and an inch at the top. This allow a convection air flow to keep the area cool. A decorative finish of your choice can be added. I also like what we used to call a "stack robber" that took waste heat out of the stack and blew it across the room for even more circulation to protect the ceiling as well. If the ceiling is low it too can benefit from a double open layer to keep its temperature reasonable. Modern wood stoves can idle for long periods and build up creosote in the chimney. How much depends on the type of wood and how seasoned it is. Every so often depending on the buildup you experience it is good to open up the stove and let it burn super hot for twenty minutes or so. Either that or clean out the chimney with a brush manually as needed. A true chimney fire is something not to be experienced by the faint hearted!! High R value insulation can hold heat to a dangerous degree and needs protection from a wood stove. When it is cold out that area close to the stove can indeed get very very warm with radiant heat penetrating the wall.
The stove has abuilt in heat shield on the back. The wall doesn't get hot.
Evan ever try a MagicHeat blower in the stovepipe, works on 110v, keeps alot of heat from going out the chimney,. less wood to keep area warm, fyi,
He only used insulated pipe at the roof
Put concrete blocks around the back and sides of the stove to create a thermal mass that will help with the heating plus a couple of stove fans.
I’m very impressed with your skills and attention to the details of this project. Enjoy your good work!!
I have same stove and have been really pleased with it. Going on 7 years of use. I have the blower, but have never installed it.
I appreciate the fact that you will clarify how long it took you to do something in your videos. Too often when people post a video like this it seems like they get it done in no time flat. When in reality it has taken hours or days to complete.
Very nice. I placed the sliding stove pipe on the bottom to the stove not on top like you did. Reason being when I clean pipe I slide it up off stove and put metal or plastic oil pan under pipe sitting on stove. when running brush down chimney it falls into oil pan not stove. when done slide down on stove . All creosote in pan.
I'm sure you had a good reason why you picked insulated stove pipe for the conditioned space, but in case you didn't think about it, part of the heat exchange will occur from heat coming off the stove pipe inside, not just coming off the stove itself. By using insulated pipe inside the conditioned space, you are reducing that heat exchange and sending additional heat up the chimney and outside, rather than warming the workshop. You might consider just having the insulated cap in the attic space, but the rest uninsulated to allow extra heat to escape inside.
@@Boobtube. He installed it 100% correct. The transfer adapter secures the pipe in place and double wall insulated keeps the pipe from getting cold and pushing air downward. The adapter also secures the pipe in place for cleaning.
He installed it 100% correct. The transfer adapter secures the pipe in place and double wall insulated keeps the pipe from getting cold and pushing air downward. The adapter also secures the pipe in place for cleaning.
I agree .
Are u saying use single wall pipe inside and insulated class A pipe outside???? That’s how I was always told it do it cuz the single wall pipe inside will put off more heat. My code and insurance reason u must use double or triple wall outside
Absolutely. We always used double pipe inside. Up in Maine it gets cold.
A couple of years ago I saw an wood ash vacuum cleaner made especially for cleaning out fire boxes and fireplace ash boxes it was also made to handle hot ash!!! I believed I saw it at TSC IN Jonesboro Arkansas
Very impressived, well thought out, no back tracking, and you get the proper stuff to do the job right.
GREAT PEOPLE, GREAT WORKERS, AND GREAT SKILLS.
Personally think that to small for shop heating like wood get but that looks like be better in home with open floor plan
Your insulated chimney looks like Metalbestos? If so they make a model for Canada (which has stricter fire codes) that has a thicker ss liner so it lasts longer and also thicker chimney caps etc. which also last much longer. If you have access to Canada it is much better quality as their codes require a pipe to last at a given temperature much longer than US codes. This translates into a pipe which has a much longer life before it burns out. Stainless does indeed lose material through each heat cycle and although better than regular mild steel it has a limited life. The hotter the burn cycle the more microns of metal are given off.
This was a very informative video. I am just getting ready to install a wood burner in my shop. Keep up the good work Evan!
..warm is good..lol.. stay safe and have a Merry Christmas..
To late now but I know some people run those flashing gasket trims turned diamond not square so it sheds water better. Less chance of it pooling at the gasket.
Merry Christmas from the UK. God bless you Evan and your wife, and family.
This fire pit is one of a few covered pits that is on the list ruclips.net/user/postUgkxAU9pOCSV9Y5JprooHvfxTpOrt4hx8uRM of approved products for Disney Fort Wilderness. The product served its purpose well and provided excellent fires throughout the evening. We were able to open the door and do s'mores, but I had to be careful because the handle was a bit hot on occasions. Additionally, I wish they had replaced some of the standard nuts with lock nuts in some places. We lost the door handle after just a couple of days of usage. Not a deal breaker, just a recommendation. I still give it 5 stars.
i follow you for about 2 years and its so nice to see this all Have a nice and Happy Christmas and a good en Happy 2022 to you From John Lobry the netherlands
JudithB First wood stove I have seen that I like better then my old Grandpa Bear! Its now 40+ yrs old and still does a great job, plus backup cooking!! Merry Christmas!!!
Looks like a good stove. I know where the dogs will be camped out when they're in the shop!
Evan, that wood stove will come in handy on those cold and rainy days in the shop and it will heat the pole barn nicely and keep you warm while working. I know it was harder than it looked, but you made it look easy. Merry Christmas to you and Rebecca!
So at 2:30, seeming to me, you drilled a hold in the steel plate first, then used a chamfer bit to augment the hole just created by you in the steel, so that you could drive a 45° wood screw into the hole in the steel?
If my understanding is correct, what you did to overcome a material non-penetrable issue during carpentry is quite something.
Love it.. Merry Christmas from Newfoundland Canada
That sure looked like on heck of a chore, but it will pay off for many warm years to come!
Appreciate How detailed you are in this. I know the editing mustve been crazy. Thanks for the effort
Love the heater! I know y’all are proud to have that done! Merry Christmas!
I have a similar stove in my pole barn. After a year of the stove setting on the concrete floor and having to kneel down when putting wood in the stove I purchased 8 6" x6" x 6" high concrete blocks and blocked the stove legs up 12". So much better whenever you need to get in the stove.
A very informative and enjoyable video,
Merry Christmas and a happy healthy 2022
Merry Christmas and Happy New year to your buddy from Nebraska
You only need double wall pipe where the pipe goes thru the ceiling and roof... Plus it will add to the heat in the room. & they come in 3 ft lenghts.
My stove burns wood or coal, coal burn HOT
That's what he did
@@daveklein2826 He used 2ft sections of double wall all the way up @ 10:25.... 3ft sections are single wall and put off heat in the room. Only need double wall in the ceiling and roof. I install and clean chimneys.
Just the video I needed before I put one up myself tm. Thanks.
Evan, You make everything look so easy. Stay warm
Sure would love a feed back on how well your wood stove is heating your pole barn? Love it
Nice on the cold winter days and working in the shop.
That roof chimney fitting will be a source of water ingress in years ahead.
Recommend a fireplace fan. It sits on top of the stove & works by the heat generated by the stove. It helps blow the heat out into the room. Just place it on top of the stove & it will amaze you by the amount of heat it blows out into that big area. No need to plug anything in or by batteries. God Bless & have a great day!
@2:52 remember when the wood says front, you must mount per the wood's instruction.
Evan, maybe a couple ceiling fans would help distribute more heat to a greater area. After I believe you said you were going to put up a ceiling.. The company I used to work for had a waste oil furnace in the hanger. It took forever to warm up after the hanger doors were open to park all the Aircraft, but after installation of four ceiling fans it was a night n day difference. Great jobs!! Love your channel and Merry Christmas ..
Yes, I will probably install a couple of ceiling fans since the ceiling is so high.
Merry Christmas to you folks. Thanks for sharing part of your lives with us. Nice stove and installation, whatever you do, you do a first class job.
That is a nice looking stove and I am sure you are going to going to enjoy it very much as you do your woodworking projects etc. over the winter. Have a blessed day.
As I watch this video I think back to when you bought your property and I am so happy for you for how far your have come ❤️ Is there anything the two of you can't do? I wish I could buy some if your merchandise but I am disabled and am on a very strict budget. That being said, I make sure to watch every single one of the ADs that come up. I know you make a bit more cash and I want to support you guys for all of the hard work it is to bring us these videos. MERRY CHRISTMAS 🎄❄️☃️
Corpus Christi TX
With double wall pipe wouldn't you lose the heat from the pipe?
Double wall is only where it goes through the roof
Merry Christmas to Evan, Rebecca, your family 👪 & to all your viewers.
God Bless.
Nice job Evan. Quality workmanship.
Nothing like a wood fire for comfort on cold days! My wife would have trouble getting me out of a shop like that with a warm stove!
Your video serves as a refresher course since it's been a while since I installed a stove. I've got one I need to install in the back room of my shop. I've already got one in the front section and it works great.
Merry Christmas y'all!
Great clean install. Light angle brace, would align the black pipe, black heat stove paint would make it look better. Thanks for sharing.
Merry Christmas Evan n Bekka. This is my Favorite channel.
Hard to tell from the video but it looks like the male ends are going up but from my understanding the male end is supposed to be down. With the male end up you can end up with creosote running down the pipe and falling out and causing a fire hazard instead of being contained inside the pipe. I believe it can also affect your draft and cause smoke to come out instead of being contained inside the pipe. Everything else looks good though. Nice video.
That’s a job I probably wouldn’t have tried myself, especially cutting the hole in the roof. Well done 👍. Merry Christmas 🎄
Enjoyed watching Evan. Hope you and Rebecca have a Merry Christmas!
Ya'll have a Merry Christmas and Happy New Year.
Hi Evan from New Zealand. Another great video. That removeable brick & ashpan arrangement seems real nifty. Back in the day when we had a woodburner it didn't matter how careful I was at removing the ash, there was always heaps of ash swirling around the room.
whew! That was a lot of climbing up/down. Good to have it this winter, it will make the workshop more pleasant to work in.
great video. you were working pretty high up there. not sure i would have liked to do that. i need to install my extra wood stove in the garage to get some heat in there. Thanks for sharing.
Thanks for all your videos. Merry Christmas.
your black pipe is all installed upside down, the kreasote that runs back down the chimney will leak out on the outside and cause a mess, plus smoke up the building. I hope you catch this notice before its too late.
It is double wall pipe. The inside pipe the crimp ring is pointing down so creosote runs back down inside the pipe. It is installed correctly. On the outside it looks backward. But it is the inside the counts.
Hope and pray that God blesses y'all with a Very Merry Christmas!!🎄🇺🇸
Looks like a well -done install! Much better than the quick and dirty installation I did in my shop building with that old Vermont Castings stove we were given. Of course, you’re in an insulated, new building with much more polished finish than our repurposed 1950’s vintage farrowing house! Ours looks ok for what it is. Yours looks really good for anything!
Merry Christmas to you both!
Evan and Rebecca may you enjoy the holidays. God bless
That is a lot of work to do get heat there but it will be freezing there soon so you have to have heat. Read your comments. Merry Christmas to you and yours.
Evan, you look like you've already installed a few of those as easy as you made it look. But I reckon you're just good at that kind of thing ... probably why that company you work for has you on maintenance. 😉 Anyway thanks for sharing it and Merry Christmas to you, Rebecca, the family and all the rest of the viewers.
Thank you, same to you! Jesus is the Reason for the Season!
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year.
Merry Christmas and a healthy, happy New Year!
Could you please put the name of the sticky caulking stuff at 14:00 on the description? I have a roof project to do in the upcoming spring. Thanks a lot.
Don't know if you can find one but, a friend of mine years ago had a Stove pipe oven attached to his chimney on his wood stove... we ate biscuits fresh cooked right in his wood shop.
Mr. Ozbun was about 80 years old. And he was the one person you went to to have your hand saws or crosscut saws sharpened
You may have wanted to add a clean out section. It sucks to sweep that pipe in the winter when that roof is full of ice.
And since you said you'll be burning cutoffs and those are probably pine wood you will need to sweep it more often since pine creates more creosote.
I started using a "sooteater" to clean the chimney in the house. You clean from the bottom up. No more getting on the roof.
I can so relate Evan. I’m living a retired life here in the Pacific Northwest. We bought some acreage back in the ‘80s and I now spend most of my days enjoying it. Not every project I do is easy either. I check your page everyday to see your latest. Love watching.
Enjoyed watching this. Thanks for sharing. Merry Christmas to you and Rebecca.
A nice stove, good video. A good way to stay warmer.
Looks great and will help keep the damp feeling of the big building down. Ceiling work, no fun! Merry Christmas!
Thanks for a year of great videos! Merry Christmas!
Great job from start to finish, it looks awesome
Merry Christmas to you all. 🤶🎅
My neighbor was going to put a woodburner in his garage. He called his homeowner's insurance co to see if a rider was required. The Company told him that they would cancel his policy if he did that. They also said if he went ahead and put it in and had a fire, they would not pay and cancel anyway.. Check ahead with your insurer for their policy regarding woodburners in garages, shops, and dwellings. Good luck and Merry Christmas.
Thats what mine did!!
WOW Evan very very nice job! Looks great! ♡♡♡ HAVE A MERRY Christmas!
Great place to cook on for canning etc. and also when you lose power. Some have a kettle on that's always slightly steaming because of the dry heat a wood stove creates. Next is two or more stove fans for heat circulation.
Good job!!
In all the time I've been following you I don't think I've so clearly seen the skill and effort gone into filming, let alone the work itself. Great admiration for you, and thank you for all the skills you share!
Happy Christmas both!
Hope it’s nice and warm for you sir
I have installed many flues and I shudder at the sight of silicon caulk. Eternabond tape or caulk is a fantastic product that more people should investigate. It really is a great product.
High temp silicone is used only on the class A insulated pipe. Good up to 450 deg F. Never on smoke pipe, even double walled.
my zero clearance fireplace used pipe similar to that. "the black sections"
Nice stove. Should keep you nice and warm.
Merry Christmas to you and your family 🎄
WOWEE! Great video! Very cool! LOVE IT!
Evan. Wranglerstar another RUclips channel has many videos on wood stoves that I found informative.....his whole channel actually. And recently he purchased a really cool fan that you place on top of your stove that moves the warm air throughout the shop. It’s really cool item , no batteries it uses a piston/ pressure using the heat. Anyway love love love a wood stove
Haven’t read comments but this was very very well done and helpful for hiring someone I will have a clue what should be done. I bet that screening is to keep bats out. Just a guess but we had bats come in our house after installing a cook stove. Great video!!
Mary Christmas to you and Rebecka
10:28 I'd say: Function before fashion! 😉
Well done!
Thanks a lot for the video! 😊👍🏻
You always do such a professional job Evan. Bravo.
Merry Christmas to you and the family. I hope you all have a safe and enjoyable one.
Thanks for entertainment and knowledge in 2021.
Cheers. Duncan.
Nice stove Evan...Merry Christmas & Happy Holidays...Evan & Rebecca and your Family
Why was the air vent knobs removed from the fronts of the new wood stoves??
Hay marry Christmas to you guys have a good one from steve c from state Oregon
I have always installed pipe with crimped ends down ( male ends) keeps creosote inside the pipe
Beautiful install Evan, I really enjoy watching your videos. You and your wife have a blessed holiday!