Originally posted by french frank
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Have you put your heating on yet?
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I can confirm that if you seal your house too well, to conserve heat, you run into damp problems. The old part of this place is a solid stone walled cottage, with double glazed windows. When I first moved in I was plagued by mould growing on everything, because the sealing caused the humidity to rise. I cured it by having a fan fitted in the loft, facing down into the upstairs corridor. It gently circulates the air and prevents damp patches from building up: its too low powered to cause noise and I usually forget its there.
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by french frank View PostMy supplier provides bags of very cheap, wet logs. I asked the sweep if they did much damage to the flue and Colin Sweep said they would make more tar and damp logs burn up three times as quickly as dry ones (less than 20% moisture). I fill up the log shelter at the end of the season so that they have more time to dry out over the summer. I found mine burn up more quickly since I made the stove legal for the Smoke Control Area - can't shut it right down.
I only burn kiln-dried seasoned hardwood in log-burner, expensive but lasts much longer. I sweep my chimney three times a year - midwinter, March or April, and a final tickle in late summer, with a wire brush as well as a sweep's head.....The most effective way to clean the chimney of course is to set fire to it, which I've accidentally done a couple of times by letting the stove get too hot - works a treat, reduces the tar to a fine powder which you can sweep the next day. But I'm not recommending it.
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That is what the sweep said. He left me a leaflet where you can order kiln dried logs online. I used to get kiln dried ones locally, but now I don't have a car (how many bags of logs can you get in a mini? I could fit in 11: 10 + 1 free) but now have to rely on the coalman. Can't think where he stores them.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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#35 Ein Alp, I wondered about that, but the fan works. I think in a sealed house you get local stagnant areas of air where the humidity builds up high enough for mould. A fan mixes all the high and low humid patches together, and the resulting mix is dry enough to inhibit mould. Anyway, I havent had any mould problems since I had it installed.
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Don Petter
Originally posted by umslopogaas View Post#35 Ein Alp, I wondered about that, but the fan works. I think in a sealed house you get local stagnant areas of air where the humidity builds up high enough for mould. A fan mixes all the high and low humid patches together, and the resulting mix is dry enough to inhibit mould. Anyway, I havent had any mould problems since I had it installed.
I had a similar idea of gently blowing hot air from the top of the airing cupboard (which contains the hot tank) down into the bathroom at floor level to use some otherwise wasted excess heat, but I've never got round to it.
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Wet logs don't burn well and anyone that says otherwise is talking through his hat.
We heated our house (12 rads) using a wood fired cooker-boiler for 15 years years and the only wood that burns adequately when freshly cut is Ash but even that will eventually tar up the chimney. As Umslopogaas says above it used to be normal for wood stove owners to bank-up the stove occasionally to convert the lacquer like tar into a crumbly soot that could be brushed out but it is a high risk policy as chimney fires can easily start and be very frightening once they get out of control - it's certainly one way of checking that the pointing in a brick or stone flue is sound!
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