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Fireplace Design & Installation

By Tim Carter
©1993-2008 Tim Carter
Summary: Fireplace design will stop a smoking fireplace. Successful fireplace design criteria have been known for quite a long time.

One of the most aggravating things in a home is a smoking fireplace. Smoke billows into the air, the smoke detector is blaring and you may have a window or door open that is chilling the room. I think I would rather get poked in the eye with a sharp stick than have a smoking fireplace!

Fireplace Design Relationships

The process of exhausting smoke and toxic gases from a fire is a complex process. Out in the open, a fire burns in any fashion it desires. The smoke rises and reacts to wind changes. In your house things are quite different. You burn the fire in a controlled space. The smoke is supposed to go up. The maximum amount of heat is supposed to radiate back into the room. These things are possible so long as you understand fireplace design relationships.

The combustion process of a fire is complex. The flames of a fire go willy nilly. Smoke rolls around in the firebox. Add to that the battle of the hot air and smoke trying to get up the chimney while the cold outside air wants to fall down the chimney. If everything isn't just right, you will get smoke in your house.

Smoke-Free Fireplaces

Smoke-free fireplaces must conform to specific firebox height, width and depth, flue size and chimney height requirements. Make a mistake in any one of these areas and you can be in a smoke-filled room!

The first element of fireplace design lies in sizing the fireplace for a room. You wouldn't put a small three foot wide fireplace in an auditorium. It simply couldn't keep the room warm. A room with a square footage of say 150 square feet can be heated with a fireplace with a 24 to 30 inch width. A large room (15 feet x 28 feet) may require a fireplace with a 4 foot or larger opening.

The point is this. You must first determine the width of your fireplace opening. Once you have this width, all other dimensions can be computed.

Low Chimneys

About six weeks ago, I was hired by some people for a consultation. They had a new home with a number of problems. One of the problems involved a prefabricated fireplace that smoked. Prefabricated fireplaces are almost always designed properly. The height, width and depth of the firebox are correct. The smoke chamber and throat of the firebox are also in proportion. The only possibility for mistake lies in the flue size and chimney height.

In this case, the fireplace was located in a first floor family room. The family room was adjacent to the two story house. The chimney was due southeast of the main part of the house. Our prevailing winds here in Cincinnati are from the northwest during the winter months.

I determined that this fireplace smoked because of a chimney that was too low. The winter winds blow over the two story portion of the house and dive down toward the family room roof. On any given day, there was enough wind pressure to offset the hot air and smoke which was trying to get out of the chimney. Yes, hot air rises, but it only has so much energy.

In this case, the chimney needed to be extended to offset the diving winds.

Chimneys that are not influenced by tall surrounding structures actually benefit from wind. The wind actually creates a partial vacuum as it blows across the top of the chimney. This vacuum helps lift the smoke and gases from the firebox.


Sound Construction

If you are building a new fireplace, you need to pay particular attention to the building code and the types of materials you are using. Fireplaces are very dangerous. Houses burn down every year from defective fireplaces or chimneys. If you don't know what you are doing, you had better consult your building inspector or an experienced, qualified mason.

There are many excellent publications that go into great detail concerning fireplace construction. I could write thousands of words about proper fireplace and chimney construction. However, there is no need to reinvent the wheel. You or your bricklayer simply need to search the existing literature citations.


Fixing an Existing Problem

I know, I know, you're wondering what to do about your existing smoking fireplace. Well, the answer may not be simple. The first place to start is to make a drawing of your fireplace. Add dimensions to your drawing. Compare your drawing to the sizes given in the following table.

If your firebox dimensions and shape are OK, then maybe the problem lies in your flue size or chimney height. The easiest thing to fix is the height of your chimney. Although often expensive, it is the easiest. If you discover that your firebox, smoke chamber and/or flue size are incorrect, there is no simple solution. The only way to solve the problem may be to start over. Ouch!

Are you building a new home? If so, you must study the following table and read the literature sources I have cited. This small investment in time will allow you peace of mind and a smoke-free home.

By the way, if you have gas available, absolutely pipe a gas supply to that new fireplace. The day may come when you dislike messing with wood. The gas line with a gas valve in place will allow you the flexibility to install gas logs at some future time. In the meantime, the gas line can be connected to a nifty gas lighter kit! No more kindling wood!

Combustion and Makeup Air

Sometimes fireplaces smoke because of another problem. They are suffocating! What do I mean by that, you ask? A roaring fire consumes massive amounts of air. If you have a new air tight house, where does this air come from? Believe it or not, the fireplace may suck the required air straight down the chimney!

Model building codes have required combustion air sources on all residential fireplaces. However, if you forget to open it or it is partially closed, the fireplace may not get enough air. Old houses are susceptible as well. In our pursuit of energy conservation, we purchase new windows and doors, caulk cracks, etc. These were the places the fireplace was getting its air supply. Check to make sure your fireplace combustion air inlet is open. If you don't have one, think about installing a source of air to offset what is going up the chimney.

 






Comments

Ben Jesus Martinez
26 Nov 2007, 18:36
My fireplace smokes usually when the heating system turns on, usually at night when fire is dying. But not always. There is an outside air source in the bottom of the firebox, towards the back but, I have not had it open. Please help with any suggestions. The house is 33yrs old.
ATB
26 Nov 2007, 19:39
Simple. Backdrafting. Please go read my past articles about this and the video about the makeup air device that looks like a dual dryer vent.
Jennifer Beauchamp
07 Dec 2007, 17:52
We just moved into a new construction home. We have a prefabricated fireplace in the family room on the first floor which is adjacent to our two story house. The fireplace is on the south side of our house. When we build fires, the first 5 minutes or so all of the smoke comes in to our house. My husband says it's because the flue is cold and we need to heat it up before lighting the fire. Is this correct and if so, how would we go about heating the flue? Our home is all electric so a gas log lighter is out of the question. Any other suggestions? Thank you-
AsktheBuilder
07 Dec 2007, 18:10
Jennifer,
Try opening the damper and holding a lit tube of rolled-up newspaper into the smoke chamber of the fireplace. Let it burn for as long as you can safely hold it up without burning your hand. This may help trigger a convection column of warm air moving up the chimney.
R Glenn
08 Dec 2007, 16:22
We are enclosing a porch and want to have an indoor round wood burning fire pit with a round funnel style hood above it. This would allow a 360 view of the fire. Would it draw properly with only fire screening around it (or no screening) or would it need to be glass enclosed?
AsktheBuilder
08 Dec 2007, 16:46
R Glenn,
I think it will draw fine. The challenge will be getting the hood height right to prevent smoking.
Darragh
13 Dec 2007, 11:00
Hi All ,
Recently my partner had a new open fireplace installed while I was away . now this has become a disaster and ruined our evenings by the fire , our fire has a back boiler in it ( used to heat the radiators) and when we light a fire its fine , the problem comes when we open or close the door to the living room .. we get a pall of smoke from the fireplace that rolls in to the room , as you can imagine its a pain in the butt . I belive the fire place is too high and is there anyway of fixing this as we are going out of our minds with it ..
AsktheBuilder
15 Dec 2007, 10:31
Darragh,
Please read *all* of my Fireplace columns. You will discover one that has a cool table of dimensions. See if yours was built correctly. The design of the smoke chamber is very critical.
Jay
23 Dec 2007, 08:18
Hello,

I have a 3 week old home, we have had 2 fires in the fireplace and smoke pours out of the front.

We have a pre-fab firebox, the chimney is short and the flue I think is not strait up. I think it comes up, makes an angle to get outside the skin of the house, then goes back vertical.

Any thoughts?

Jay in Edmond, OK

AsktheBuilder
23 Dec 2007, 08:28
Jay,
Yes, read this column again. I talk about short chimneys. Also go read ALL of my other columns about fireplaces and the proper design of the firebox. See if your setup is correct.

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