Specifications
Solution 2.5-ZC Fireplace Installation and Operation Manual  53 
8  The Venting System 
8.1 General  
The venting system, acts as the engine that drives your wood heating system. Even the 
best fireplace will not function safely and efficiently as intended if it is not connected to a 
suitable chimney. 
The heat in the flue gases that pass from the fireplace into the chimney is not waste heat. 
This heat is what the chimney uses to make the draft that draws in combustion air, keeps 
smoke inside the fireplace and safely vents exhaust to outside. You can think of heat in 
the flue gas as the fuel the chimney uses to make draft. 
8.2 Suitable Chimneys 
Your wood fireplace will provide optimum efficiency and performance when connected to a 
6-inch diameter chimney. 
8.3 Minimum Chimney 
Height 
The top of the chimney should be 
tall enough to be above the air 
turbulence caused when wind 
blows against the house and its 
roof. The chimney must extend at 
least 1 m (3 ft.) above the highest 
point of contact with the roof, and 
at least 60 cm (2 ft.) higher than 
any roof line or obstacle within a 
horizontal distance of 3 m (10 ft.). 
8.4  The Relationship Between the Chimney and the House 
Because the venting system is the engine that drives the wood heating system, it must 
have the right characteristics. The signs of bad system design are cold backdrafting when 
there is no fire in the fireplace, slow kindling of new fires, and smoke roll-out when the door 
is opened for loading. 
8.4.1  Why the chimney should penetrate the highest heated space 
When it is cold outside, the warm air in the house is buoyant so it tends to rise. This 
tendency of warm air to rise creates a slight pressure difference in the house. Called ‘stack 
effect’, it produces a slightly negative pressure low in the house (relative to outside) and a 
slightly positive pressure zone high in the house. If there is no fire burning in a heater 
connected to a chimney that is shorter than the warm space inside the house, the slight 
negative pressure low in the house will compete against the desired upward flow in the 
chimney. 










