The Morning Call (Sunday)

Why is smoke billowing from new fireplace?

- By Tim Carter

Q: I really need your help. I just moved into my new home and have a smoking full masonry fireplace. It’s 55 inches wide and has an arched opening that’s 33.5 inches at the peak of the arch. It looks like regular brick mortar was used with the firebrick. For whatever reason, it has two flues and a damper on each one. It smokes like an old steam locomotive, sending clouds of choking smoke into the house. Cracking a window helps but doesn’t solve the problem. Should there only be one flue? Should I only open one damper? What’s wrong?

A: When I opened this email and saw the reader’s fireplace photo, I exhaled a heavy sigh. I was flooded with a range of emotions. Frustratio­n, sorrow, mild anger and sympathy were at the top of the list. It breaks my heart to get bad news like this knowing that it’s so easy to build things, even fireplaces, that work perfectly. The science of how fireplaces and chimneys work has been known for hundreds of years.

I want to take this opportunit­y once again to plead the case for you to lobby your local school board to bring back vocational training in both grade school and high school. In my opinion, it should be mandatory, and all boys and girls should be exposed to the same learning material each year as they move through the 12 grades. We need to expose students to the ways in which houses work — and the right way to build and repair things — because they’re all going to need a roof over their heads as they grow older.

The vocational training not only will help give young people the confidence to make minor repairs and talk intelligen­tly with contractor­s, but may also prove to be a springboar­d for those who might want to work with their hands in a rewarding lifelong vocation. We must have new young people entering the trades each year. This is just common sense. Let’s expose the trades to children and allow them to see how rewarding it is to absorb this valuable knowledge.

Let’s roll up our sleeves and deal with what should have happened as this fireplace was built. I’m sorry to say that the fireplace is the absolute worst job I’ve ever seen in my career. It was destined to fail from the get-go.

The Brick Industry Associatio­n, or BIA, has published clear and concise pamphlets for decades that show exactly how to build a residentia­l wood-burning fireplace that will never smoke. Not only do these pamphlets cover the sizing requiremen­ts, but they also go into great detail about how to size the flue properly and match it to the height of the chimney.

It’s important to realize the size and shape of the firebox are directly related to the width and height of the opening to the fireplace. You can’t just guess, as this mason did. As crazy as this sounds, the mason created a firebox that had two short stub walls that projected back into the firebox, then the two walls went off at 45-degree angles to meet at a hard 90-degree corner in the rear of the firebox. It’s no wonder smoke billowed into the house.

The shape and size of the firebox is critical, but what you don’t see above the firebox is even more important. The shape and size of the throat of the fireplace as well as the design of the smoke shelf is of the utmost importance to ensure all the smoke and hot gases go up the chimney rather than roll into the room.

What’s sad about all this is that just about anybody with moderate hand-eye skills can build a nonsmoking fireplace using the easy-to-understand informatio­n available for free from the BIA. It’s maddening that anyone would have a smoking fireplace when you think about how the technical drawings, specs, etc., are all readily available.

Let’s talk about the use of ordinary brick mortar inside fireplace fireboxes. It’s a mistake, plain and simple. The firebrick used in a firebox is special refractory brick meant for high temperatur­es. It’s quite possible the temperatur­e in a roaring fire could exceed 1,000 degrees in certain situations. Normal brick mortar is not made to withstand this temperatur­e swing from room temperatur­e to four-digit temperatur­es.

Fireclay is the best thing to use to create thin joints between the firebrick. Fireclay is a special fine clay you mix with water to the consistenc­y of a thick gravy. Skilled masons carefully dip the edge of a firebrick in this to apply the perfect amount of fireclay to each brick. The joint between the firebrick usually ends up no wider than 1⁄16 inch.

With the wet fireclay on the edge of a firebrick, the mason then presses it against another brick, and the fireclay creates a fireproof bond. This fireclay is not much different from the clay my daughter uses to make pottery. She fires this clay in a kiln that reaches temperatur­es in excess of 2,100 F. It will easily withstand thousands of fires over decades of use without crumbling, as ordinary brick mortar will.

I’ve created a special page on AsktheBuil­der.com that shares all the BIA informatio­n with you. Just type this exact URL into your browser so you can have a nonsmoking fireplace: GO.askthebuil­der.com/fireplace .

 ?? TIM CARTER/TNS ?? The builder neglected to follow simple, readily available instructio­ns from the Brick Industry Associatio­n on how to build a proper fireplace.
TIM CARTER/TNS The builder neglected to follow simple, readily available instructio­ns from the Brick Industry Associatio­n on how to build a proper fireplace.

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