Re: New 36inch castable build in Brisbane
I'll be facing a similar situation in the not too distant future. My oven will be under a roof and I'll have to do the roof flashing. Roof penetrations is not very common here, a large percentage of people vent their wood burning devices through the wall then transition to vertical.
The wood stove shops want an arm and a leg for any of their parts so I have fabricated my own chimney and will do the same with the roof flashing and storm cover- similar to yours. I used spiral stainless ducting (inner 150mm and outer 200mm) capped the ends and filled the inside with loose perlite. You can still feel some heat, but it will not burn you. My roof will possibly be standing seam galvalume (maybe black) .035mm and the chimney flashing parts probably .05. I have a friend who is a sheet metal fabricator who lets me use his special tools for my own work (like running the standing seam panels).
It is nice to see how a nice build comes together. Now that this project is nearing completion---what is next on the list?
There is "stove gasket cement" that might also work for you. If you marked the finish location of the storm collar on the chimney, then applied the cement beneath the collar--when you slid the collar down to the proper place, you would only see a very narrow line of black from the gasket cement. When it dries, it is hard like a rock and should work for your max temperature range... just a thought if the silicone becomes a problem.
Even if some water did seep by--it would only be a few drops! No big deal anyway!
I'll be facing a similar situation in the not too distant future. My oven will be under a roof and I'll have to do the roof flashing. Roof penetrations is not very common here, a large percentage of people vent their wood burning devices through the wall then transition to vertical.
The wood stove shops want an arm and a leg for any of their parts so I have fabricated my own chimney and will do the same with the roof flashing and storm cover- similar to yours. I used spiral stainless ducting (inner 150mm and outer 200mm) capped the ends and filled the inside with loose perlite. You can still feel some heat, but it will not burn you. My roof will possibly be standing seam galvalume (maybe black) .035mm and the chimney flashing parts probably .05. I have a friend who is a sheet metal fabricator who lets me use his special tools for my own work (like running the standing seam panels).
It is nice to see how a nice build comes together. Now that this project is nearing completion---what is next on the list?
There is "stove gasket cement" that might also work for you. If you marked the finish location of the storm collar on the chimney, then applied the cement beneath the collar--when you slid the collar down to the proper place, you would only see a very narrow line of black from the gasket cement. When it dries, it is hard like a rock and should work for your max temperature range... just a thought if the silicone becomes a problem.
Even if some water did seep by--it would only be a few drops! No big deal anyway!
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