Open fire causing smoke in room upstairs
Discussion
I’ve got an open fire downstairs which we burn smokeless fuel on, inevitably it takes a bit of wood to get it going which does produce smoke but this goes straight up the chimney.
I noticed a smell upstairs in rooms above the one with fireplace and today I noticed the bathroom up there had smoke visibly in the air.
I had it swept and checked recently and they said it was in good shape so I’m surprised this is happening - any ideas from the hive mind?
I noticed a smell upstairs in rooms above the one with fireplace and today I noticed the bathroom up there had smoke visibly in the air.
I had it swept and checked recently and they said it was in good shape so I’m surprised this is happening - any ideas from the hive mind?
Simpo Two said:
When you lit the fire did any smoke get into the room? It's not uncommon with a cold flue.
But visible smoke upstairs is a bit worrying.
Nope. None at all in the room. But visible smoke upstairs is a bit worrying.
I assume there are multiple chimneys in the house that no longer have visible fireplaces upstairs - maybe smoke got into one of those and then out somehow?
Or the brick lining is f
ked?Can you smoke test it yourself? Pop a smoke bomb (is that what they're called?) in the grate and see whats happening. The smoke is either escaping from within, or not being drawn up the chimney in the first place I guess. You can get a kind of vapour lock if conditions are right, but not sure what those conditions are? Cold and damp I assume. If you put wood on once the chimney is up to temp, do you still notice the smoke, or is it just on startup?
Edit: Beaten to it by Simpo. If it's not escaping on initial start up, it sounds like its leaking.
Edit: Beaten to it by Simpo. If it's not escaping on initial start up, it sounds like its leaking.
Edited by craigthecoupe on Tuesday 25th November 20:36
Have you got a liner in the chimney?
My house used to get smoke upstairs when the fire was lit, mortar in the chimney turns to dust over time due and smoke finds its way through.
The very minimum you should be doing is putting a carbon monoxide meter in the room where the chimney is. Make sure it’s positioned correctly too.
My house used to get smoke upstairs when the fire was lit, mortar in the chimney turns to dust over time due and smoke finds its way through.
The very minimum you should be doing is putting a carbon monoxide meter in the room where the chimney is. Make sure it’s positioned correctly too.
Gtom said:
Have you got a liner in the chimney?
My house used to get smoke upstairs when the fire was lit, mortar in the chimney turns to dust over time due and smoke finds its way through.
The very minimum you should be doing is putting a carbon monoxide meter in the room where the chimney is. Make sure it s positioned correctly too.
I don’t know, only moved here recently and then had it swept where they said it looked fine and gave me a certificate thing. My house used to get smoke upstairs when the fire was lit, mortar in the chimney turns to dust over time due and smoke finds its way through.
The very minimum you should be doing is putting a carbon monoxide meter in the room where the chimney is. Make sure it s positioned correctly too.
Do you mean the bathroom upstairs where the chimney passes through? There’s a smell in a guest room that’s next to it actually too - so maybe there also?
I’ll call the sweeps tomorrow I guess - what does lining a chimney cost?
We had this once. Chimney had been swept and sweep assured me it was all good but we always had a slight smoke smell in the bedroom above it. I had assumed the brickwork was breaking down. Got it swept the following year by a new sweep who came well recommended who put a camera up and found the old sweep had not removed a nest completely. Since the nest has been removed we had had no smells at all.
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