Relining Your Oil-Fired Appliance ChimneyThe oil burner technician should service your oil-fired
appliance after each heating season. When he removes the connector pipe and opens the cleanout door, he can find one
or more of the following:
- Small particles of the chimney liner that have fallen to the base of the chimney
- No
chimney lining
- A cracked or broken flue tile
- A wet chimney
These are just some of the problems that
can cause poor chimney performances. Most of them can be corrected by relining your chimney.
Old
AppliancesThe long-term effects on a clay tile flue liner venting oil-fired appliances can be gradual
deterioration of the liner due to the acidic nature of the chimney residue. This process can occur over many years.
The liner walls can soften and flake off material opening holes through the liner walls. If this happens, the flue must
be relined.
New AppliancesNew high efficiency oil-fired appliances require
smaller flue sizes than older units. Where an old unit may require an eight-inch flue, the replacement unit’s
installation instructions may call for a five-inch flue.
This is a 60% reduction in flue size. Couple that
with lower flue gas temperatures of the new unit and the flue size becomes much more critical to the proper operation of the
appliance.
In cold, oversized masonry chimneys, the less-hot flue gases of modern appliances quickly expand and
cool even more.
Draft is drastically reduced because it depends upon the buoyancy
of the hot flue gases. The cooler the gases become, the slower they move up the flue and the more the draft is reduced.
This will reduce an appliance’s efficiency and increase fuel consumption. The longer the flue gasses remain in
the flue, the greater the risk of leakage into the home.
Water Vapor, a normal by-product of combustion,
condenses on the cool internal surface of oversized flues. This problem is worse in exterior chimneys and cold climates.
The resulting moisture can be absorbed by the chimney and transferred through the walls. It may cause paint to peel,
and wallpaper and plaster to fall. In winter, wet chimneys experience numerous freeze/thaw cycles causing bricks and
clay tile liners to spall or flake, mortar joints to erode, and water leakage at the bottom of the chimney.
Dangerous
carbon monoxide gas can be forced into your home through open mortar joints, cracked flue liners and flues blocked
by debris.
Deterioration of the flue liner can occur when venting oil-fired appliances.
Chemical compounds such as sulfur residues from the oil and chlorides from the laundry area, when combined with water, form
highly aggressive acids capable of causing considerable damage to flue tiles in masonry chimneys.