Thank you for sharing!! This was a very detailed video. I am adding a wood stove to my mom's home and was trying to figure out if the basement was possible or not.
Thank you for sharing! We are looking at finishing our basement while using a wood stove down there. I like the idea of metal roofing as a heat shield to protect the drywall.
Glad I saw this. We're putting a stove in the basement. I have one of those small windows near the top of the basement ceiling. It will save drilling through the poured concrete wall
I have one of those windows too, but I also have a living room window above it, and the wife already said no to a pipe view. So looks like I’ll have to drill the concrete wall
thanks bro! i had to block one of the stupidest people in the world that made rude comments and said stupid ass a chimney box made of wood. after i told him about class A chimney pipe he kept on insulting me. some people are dumb as dirt lol. i actually feel sorry for him living live so angry!
Nice project without cutting another wall penetration. The Duravent materials sure are nice, but so expensive. I believe I would have extended the chimney our so that I'd avoided the roof hole. Regarding the flashing it would be better to put mastic/sealant under the metal edge before fastening down. I'm sure the flashing extended up under the shingles on the top edge. The bracket material is call uni-strut. Typically the roof brackets would run back at say a 45 degree angle to the chimney. I'm looking at running a temporary setup out a window also. I've always burned wood and when I built this place I went with a mini-split with gas backup for when it is below 0*F. It works well but since I've always burned wood I have a prepper mind set and wonder about when my electricity goes off. I came across a nice wood stove and I want to give it a test run before cutting holes in the wall, and I prefer not to cut any holes in the roof.
Awesome professionally done job. Thank you very much for taking the time to record, edit and commentate on your project. I'd been looking into doing the same thing for my house and I want it to be done really well and safely as possible. This video showed me I wasn't fully ready when it came to costs in buying well insulated piping! Only question I had is how long did it take you to fully do the project?
Hi there...cost was a big concern to me so i shopped for best prices ! The stove i found first because all the plans come up from there. The expensive pipes i put on a no balance credit card so i am just about paid off on that 1 year later. All the cheaper things i just paid out of pocket. Now as for how long it took ...building the wood box and mounting took about 3 hours then the rest is fast and easy maybe another 6-8 hours cutting the holes in the house etc. I broke up the job over about 3 weeks and setting up for a video waste time that i didn't have to do! Thanks for watching and your comment!
Thank you! Its been a while but think I put a piece of single wall in the thimble and then screwed on a 90% pipe and screwed all the rest of the pipes down to the stove so it is ridged and can't work itself out. Good question thanks!!
I may have missed this, but do you have a second window in the basement unaffected by the addition of the pellet stove? Due to fire codes, each basement in my area has go have a window that allows for access in case of fire.
Curious, that box you installed in the window how come you didn't insulate it? Its essentially an empty space in between the wood and when the stove isn't lit it will draw in cold from the outside, no? Thanks
Thanks and good comment! I should have thought about that! I will do so after the heating season! That is what this is all about learning from others!!
Thanks so much! I love the mini split. It has a heat pump as well to heat a good part of my house. Last winter I installed a second one also with a heat pump. So I have three sources for heat. Oil, wood and the mini splits.
Looks great. I just put a woodstove in my basement. Have you researched pass through vents from the basement to the first floor? Just wondering if you have any recommendations.
Thanks! I have not looked into vents because I have a wood stove on the main floor. However if this was all I had it would be a great idea. My father told me the only heat they had as a boy was from a wood burning stove in the kitchen. He would put a hot rock under his bed to stay warm and run like hell to the kitchen in the morning.
@@ronstickle4694 a friend of mine has one in his basement. A big one. He swears that it keeps the floor and the structure warm and supplements the furnace well. We'll see. This is my first year with a woodstove as we built a home on some wooded acreage over this last summer so some trial and error will ensue.
Hi Ron, Is this only a safe install for a basement because of the cement foundation surrounding the initial pipe connection? Could this be done out of a regular house window?
Hi Boucha. This kind of triple wall pipe is safe for wood on main floor and up through the ceiling but you MUST use the correct thimble giving the pipe about 14" or more clearance! I did my research for my project! Don't trust anyone even me do all the research your self for what you want to do and follow the codes from your area and the manufacture of the parts you use! Mine is working nicely and safe over a year later! Thank you for watching and your question!
it is a big stove so if i really get it going and open the basement door it lets lots of heat up to the main floor that is only 1000 square ft. if i then used a box fan to move the heat around it will then heat the whole house. Thanks for asking!
Great information. I had installed a stove on our first floor and I have a pipe dream of having one in our basement someday too. When cooking on it, do you ever feel like you would need a vent hood for smoke?
thanks for looking and your comment ..and a hood no because i will not cook anything to smoky just things you heat up or like eggs and things like that..
great job man i saw the rude comments zyx zyx made before you blocked him. even after you you gave him a chance to see why he was wrong he still made rude comments about my reply. some people are stupid as dirt.I am planing on doing one like myself. keep on man!
wow, I would have just used a angle piece of pipe rather than cutting into the soffit and roof! Save a lot of time and money by not cutting into the roof..
i thought about a lot and found it much less expensive and could repair the roof easy and cheep if i wanted to remove the stove. that pipe cost lots more than repair what i did and ugly. Thanks for the comment!
thanks for asking! the whole project was less than $1000 for sure this a one floor ranch and would have been another $500 or more if i had a second floor!
Terrific job, thanks!
Great job, u saved a fortune doing the install urself.
Thank You!!!
Thank you for sharing!! This was a very detailed video. I am adding a wood stove to my mom's home and was trying to figure out if the basement was possible or not.
Thank you so much!
Thank you for sharing! We are looking at finishing our basement while using a wood stove down there. I like the idea of metal roofing as a heat shield to protect the drywall.
Thank you so much!
Finally!!! Somebody doing a proper thru the wall installation!! Not some plywood and galvanized single wall snap lock pipe hack job. Thank you!
Thanks J!
Helpful. Now I just gotta buy materials, the worst part of any project, cashiers checkout.
Great video, answered a ton of questions!
Thanks so much!
Glad I saw this. We're putting a stove in the basement. I have one of those small windows near the top of the basement ceiling. It will save drilling through the poured concrete wall
Thanks Rich!
I have one of those windows too, but I also have a living room window above it, and the wife already said no to a pipe view. So looks like I’ll have to drill the concrete wall
Great video. Thanks for making it.
Thank you!
Great video Ron. Thanks!
thank you Rick!
Thanks so much I'm getting ready to do the exact same thing and I am basically following your example to the t
Thanks so much Dan!! I am so glad this helps you!
Thinking about doing the same thing.. Only thing is my window is a typical regular size so i have to do some measuring.. Thanks for sharing
Would recommend putting silicone sealer under the roof flashing edges, and under the chimney support brackets screwed into the roof.
Thanks! I should have thought of that!
Awesome. Great job.
thanks bro! i had to block one of the stupidest people in the world that made rude comments and said stupid ass a chimney box made of wood. after i told him about class A chimney pipe he kept on insulting me. some people are dumb as dirt lol. i actually feel sorry for him living live so angry!
I am going to go ahead and install one in my basement too
Great information!
Thank you very much!
Nice project without cutting another wall penetration. The Duravent materials sure are nice, but so expensive. I believe I would have extended the chimney our so that I'd avoided the roof hole. Regarding the flashing it would be better to put mastic/sealant under the metal edge before fastening down. I'm sure the flashing extended up under the shingles on the top edge. The bracket material is call uni-strut. Typically the roof brackets would run back at say a 45 degree angle to the chimney. I'm looking at running a temporary setup out a window also. I've always burned wood and when I built this place I went with a mini-split with gas backup for when it is below 0*F. It works well but since I've always burned wood I have a prepper mind set and wonder about when my electricity goes off. I came across a nice wood stove and I want to give it a test run before cutting holes in the wall, and I prefer not to cut any holes in the roof.
Thanks for the comments and advise. Yea.. Going through the roof I did to save money and I feel it looks better as well.
Great video, wish I watched before I spent close to $600 or more on the duravent plus kit, extra pipe, brackets, still missing my flashing!
Thank You!! This is what it is all about! Learning from others!
Nice job on the install, the little brackets are called unistrut and can be found in electrical supplies
Awesome professionally done job. Thank you very much for taking the time to record, edit and commentate on your project. I'd been looking into doing the same thing for my house and I want it to be done really well and safely as possible. This video showed me I wasn't fully ready when it came to costs in buying well insulated piping!
Only question I had is how long did it take you to fully do the project?
Hi there...cost was a big concern to me so i shopped for best prices ! The stove i found first because all the plans come up from there. The expensive pipes i put on a no balance credit card so i am just about paid off on that 1 year later. All the cheaper things i just paid out of pocket. Now as for how long it took ...building the wood box and mounting took about 3 hours then the rest is fast and easy maybe another 6-8 hours cutting the holes in the house etc. I broke up the job over about 3 weeks and setting up for a video waste time that i didn't have to do! Thanks for watching and your comment!
Great Job!
Thank You!
Good job bro
Nice install friend!
thank you friend!
16:25 unistrut
Thank you for making this video so understandable and simple. Can you come to my house and install mine?!
thank you for watching i wish i could do this for a living and help people
Great job! How does the single wall pipe connect to the wall thimble inside the house?
Thank you! Its been a while but think I put a piece of single wall in the thimble and then screwed on a 90% pipe and screwed all the rest of the pipes down to the stove so it is ridged and can't work itself out. Good question thanks!!
I may have missed this, but do you have a second window in the basement unaffected by the addition of the pellet stove? Due to fire codes, each basement in my area has go have a window that allows for access in case of fire.
Yes i have two more windows in the wall to the right of the wood stove as your standing in front of it.
Good info. I'm looking to install one myself and am somewhat lost so thank you for taking the time to show your work!!
thanks!! i learned a lot from youtube and the internet. by the time i got started i had no fear at all. thank you for the nice comment and watching!
Curious, that box you installed in the window how come you didn't insulate it? Its essentially an empty space in between the wood and when the stove isn't lit it will draw in cold from the outside, no? Thanks
Thanks and good comment! I should have thought about that! I will do so after the heating season! That is what this is all about learning from others!!
Ron! Udaman! Many thanks for the video. It answered a lot of my questions. I noticed you have a mini split. Have you been happy with it?
Thanks so much! I love the mini split. It has a heat pump as well to heat a good part of my house. Last winter I installed a second one also with a heat pump. So I have three sources for heat. Oil, wood and the mini splits.
Looks great. I just put a woodstove in my basement. Have you researched pass through vents from the basement to the first floor? Just wondering if you have any recommendations.
Thanks! I have not looked into vents because I have a wood stove on the main floor. However if this was all I had it would be a great idea. My father told me the only heat they had as a boy was from a wood burning stove in the kitchen. He would put a hot rock under his bed to stay warm and run like hell to the kitchen in the morning.
@@ronstickle4694 a friend of mine has one in his basement. A big one. He swears that it keeps the floor and the structure warm and supplements the furnace well. We'll see. This is my first year with a woodstove as we built a home on some wooded acreage over this last summer so some trial and error will ensue.
@@jessesoldan7813 Mine does keep the main floor warm.
Hi Ron, Is this only a safe install for a basement because of the cement foundation surrounding the initial pipe connection? Could this be done out of a regular house window?
Hi Boucha. This kind of triple wall pipe is safe for wood on main floor and up through the ceiling but you MUST use the correct thimble giving the pipe about 14" or more clearance! I did my research for my project! Don't trust anyone even me do all the research your self for what you want to do and follow the codes from your area and the manufacture of the parts you use! Mine is working nicely and safe over a year later! Thank you for watching and your question!
Does this heat up your entire home? I'm installing one of these next year in my basement as well.
it is a big stove so if i really get it going and open the basement door it lets lots of heat up to the main floor that is only 1000 square ft. if i then used a box fan to move the heat around it will then heat the whole house. Thanks for asking!
Great information. I had installed a stove on our first floor and I have a pipe dream of having one in our basement someday too. When cooking on it, do you ever feel like you would need a vent hood for smoke?
thanks for looking and your comment ..and a hood no because i will not cook anything to smoky just things you heat up or like eggs and things like that..
great job man i saw the rude comments zyx zyx made before you blocked him. even after you you gave him a chance to see why he was wrong he still made rude comments about my reply. some people are stupid as dirt.I am planing on doing one like myself. keep on man!
wow, I would have just used a angle piece of pipe rather than cutting into the soffit and roof! Save a lot of time and money by not cutting into the roof..
i thought about a lot and found it much less expensive and could repair the roof easy and cheep if i wanted to remove the stove. that pipe cost lots more than repair what i did and ugly. Thanks for the comment!
Wood stove flue pipe is like water pipe, the straighter the run, the better. It also makes the pipe easier to clean.
Not code in some city's dude
You added some figures together and came up with a subtotal of $900, but then continued adding and didn't give a grand total of what it cost.
thanks for asking! the whole project was less than $1000 for sure this a one floor ranch and would have been another $500 or more if i had a second floor!