How to insulate very wide fireplace

fireplaceinsulation

I want to air-seal my fireplace. The damper is 44" wide, and it's about 4 feet off the floor, not easy to reach. The chimney tapers gradually for several feet after that, a couple inches narrower per tier of brick.

I'd like to install a chimney balloon, but they max out at 38" wide, and they need parallel surfaces to press against. My chimney doesn't have anything fitting those constraints until somewhere near the ceiling.

Update: I won't use the fireplace, but some day I'll sell the house, so any blockage will need to be reversible.

Best Answer

To make the fireplace waste less cooled or warmed air there are several approaches to take. Each has its own advantages and disadvantages:

  • Cap the chimney. This is easy, inexpensive, and solves most airflow inefficiencies as well as most pest problems. It can be done easily reversibly or more permanently. It doesn't do anything to improve the aesthetics of the fireplace though. Photo from here:

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  • Install a direct vent gas fireplace insert. One of these makes the fireplace a useful heating device which works even with an electrical outage. To boost air circulation efficiency most have a blower which varies by manufacturer quality from horrible to awesome (of reliability, noise, effectiveness). It requires installing a gas line and electricity preferably through the side or back of the fireplace though it can come from the front where it is harder to hide. A fireplace insert with installation ranges from $2,500 to $7,000. The "direct vent" feature completely prevents airflow from within the room to the outside and the small ducts installed to the chimney top prevent almost all pest problems. I suppose it is reversible (by uninstalling it) if one wanted to throw wood, paper, champagne glasses into it, but the gas line makes this "not easy". Photo from here:

     from Napoleonfireplaces.com/products/finelineseries/

  • Install a glass (or metal) door. This costs a lot less than an insert and can significantly increase the appeal of the fireplace. A well-made custom door almost completely prevents airflow, yet you still have the option of a cheery wood burning fire. From here:

     from www.glassfireplacedoors.com/products/finelineseries/