Woodstove Thermal Barriers
Two low-cost approaches to safe heater installation, including metal convection barriers and insulation heat board shields.
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Because the walls are lined with foil-covered fiberglass duct board, this stove can safely stand only 18 from the combustible barrier.
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Two low-cost approaches to safe heater
installation:
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Every well-informed woodstove owner wants to have the
safest installation possible . . . but many folks have
discovered that, when they follow the recommendations for
safe clearances set down by the National Fire Protection
Association, they end up with their heaters smack-dab in
the middle of the room. Specifically, the NFPA states that
no wood-or coal-burning device should be placed less than
36inches from an unprotected combustible
surface. So, when you add three feet of clearance to about
three feet of stove, and include at least a foot of base
pan extension in front (for safe ash removal) ... a typical
wood heater will protrude some seven feet from a
wall! That amounts to a fair hunk of living space lost, and
also means that your hot stove will interfere with normal
traffic in the room.
There is, however, a set of NFPA stipulations which state
that woodburning appliances can be safely placed closer to
walls if an appropriate heat shield is protecting
all combustible material. In fact, when such a protector is
in place, it's possible to position your stove a mere 12
inches from a flammable barrier!
At the onset of the 1979-1980 heating season, two of
MOTHER's staff members were presented with clearance
problems when installing their own woodstoves, and we're
sure that anyone who's even contemplating wood heat will
find the approaches they took—to establish the safest
possible installations while maintaining maximum living
space—interesting.
METAL CONVECTION BARRIERS
By positioning a sheet-metal "guard" one inch out from a
combustible surface, it's possible to significantly reduce
the temperature to which the flammable wall would otherwise
be subjected by a woodstove's radiant heat. The metal
barrier—in this case, 24-gauge galvanized
steel—is itself heated by the stove, and
establishes a rising convective air flow in the space
behind the sheet ... effectively cooling the back of the
steel and preventing the flammable wall from
becoming dangerously overheated.
Building a sheet-metal thermal barrier is very easy, but
there are a few important considerations to keep in mind
while planning the design. First, there must be a one- to
two-inch space between the floor and the steel (to allow
air to pass underneath and behind the barrier). And, of
course, the lumber that braces the metal (we used 1-1/16"
square stock) must be positioned vertically to avoid
impeding the convective flow.