Re: Indoor Kitchen and WFO
So is the implication that the smoke-on-start up issue is unacceptable with a WFO (vs. other woodburning fireplaces) because of the design of the WFO or because of your chimney requirements?
Chimney issues aside, it seems like smoke on start up is in no way exclusive to a WFO and has as much to do with the method of firestarting and state of the wood used as it does design. Not much different from many current-era fireplaces in that regard.
If this is the primary stumbling block, I believe one could devise means of mitigating the problem by 1. mimicking to the curved throat and flue design ala Rumford (which many WFO builders have done anyway) and/or 2. devising some kind of a door for the outside arch to keep the smoke contained until draw has been established.
There are, after all, MANY people who already have successful WFO's indoors.
I completely hear you on the cost thing, however. I have the advantage of being able to go straight up inside, but it's still ~25' feet straight up.
So is the implication that the smoke-on-start up issue is unacceptable with a WFO (vs. other woodburning fireplaces) because of the design of the WFO or because of your chimney requirements?
Chimney issues aside, it seems like smoke on start up is in no way exclusive to a WFO and has as much to do with the method of firestarting and state of the wood used as it does design. Not much different from many current-era fireplaces in that regard.
If this is the primary stumbling block, I believe one could devise means of mitigating the problem by 1. mimicking to the curved throat and flue design ala Rumford (which many WFO builders have done anyway) and/or 2. devising some kind of a door for the outside arch to keep the smoke contained until draw has been established.
There are, after all, MANY people who already have successful WFO's indoors.
I completely hear you on the cost thing, however. I have the advantage of being able to go straight up inside, but it's still ~25' feet straight up.
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