It is well enough to say just how
a fireplace should be built so that it will work satisfactorily,
but that does not go far in helping the man who has
a fireplace that will not work. Frequently it
is possible without any very great expense and trouble
to correct a fireplace that has been improperly built.
If one has in mind a clear comprehension of the few
elementary principles of fireplace construction it
will usually be an easy matter to determine the reason
why a fireplace smokes or fails to draw.
The cross-section area of the flue
is likely to prove the most common difficulty.
Usually this cannot be seen from inside the fireplace,
because of the narrow throat and the smoke chamber
which in some form may be above the shelf. If,
therefore, the apparent essentials such
as shape of opening, narrow throat across the whole
width, and preferably the slanting back have
been followed out it would be well to determine the
area of the flue itself. To do this it will be
necessary to reach the top of the chimney and, by
lowering a weight on a line, find which flue leads
to the fireplace in question. Its area at the
top will in all probability be its area throughout.
If the flue happens to be the only one in that particular
chimney it may sometimes be determined more easily
by counting the bricks in its two horizontal directions
and in this way estimating what would probably be
the inside flue. This conclusion is by no means
sure, however, since the chimney may be built with
eight-inch walls or it may be simply a four-inch wall
with the flue lining. To one with a knowledge
of bricklaying, however, the way in which the chimney
is laid up will usually indicate the size of the flue.
Having determined the size of the
fireplace opening and the cross-section area of the
flue itself, it will in many cases be found that the
latter is too small for the former. The easiest
way to remedy this difficulty naturally would be to
decrease the size of the opening in the face of the
fireplace. In order to check up the diagnosis,
however, it would be well to fit a pair of thin boards
to wedge fairly tightly into the opening at the top,
one of which boards could be drawn down past the other
one so that the fireplace opening may be decreased
anywhere from six to twelve inches in height using
two six-inch boards. By testing the fireplace
in action in this way it will be readily determined
by what amount the opening must be decreased.
The boards then being removed, a wrought-iron curtain
or decorative projecting hood of wrought iron or copper
may be fitted permanently to the front.
It is possible, however, that the
opening of the fireplace and the flue area are properly
related, in which case it may be found that the trouble
is due to the lack of a narrow throat and smoke shelf.
This too could be constructed in the fireplace without
disturbing anything outside, such as the mantel or
chimney breast, unless the fireplace is not large
enough to permit the addition of four inches of brick
at the back. If it is not, it will be well to
examine carefully the thickness of the wall at the
back of the fireplace and if this is sufficient, part
of it could be taken away where the slope of the back
joins the upright wall about a foot above
the hearth surface and the sloping back
built in from there up to form the throat. Or,
to make perfectly sure of the result, the mantel itself
could be removed this is usually merely
nailed to the plaster and enough of the
chimney breast taken down to permit the introduction
of a cast-iron throat damper.