Instructions
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1.0 Installing your Morsø stove
1.1 Unpacking the stove
First remove the outer carton and lay at next to the stove; this can act as a protective work-
ing surface during the assembly procedure.
For shipping purposes, the stove is bolted to the wooded pallet; it should be released from
the pallet by removing the bolts from the underside.
Remove the 2 cast iron bae plates, leg package and bottom grate from inside the stove
and set aside.
Mounting the legs
Gently lay the stove onto its back; the Morsø 7110 stove
weighs 140 kg and Morsø 7140 weighs 150 kg. therefore
any lifting or moving of the stove should be performed
by 2 people.
Using the 4 bolts and washers placed inside the stove,
attached the legs to the underside of the base plate. DO
NOT USE THE CARRIAGE BOLTS AND WASHERS.
The stove is intended for intermittent use.
1.2 Installing the stove
The stove and chimney installations MUST comply to all current National and Local Building Regu-
lations; your approved Morsø dealer or your local building control ocer can advise regarding this.
Ultimately, it is you and your installer who is responsible that the installation complies.
1.3 Chimney Sweeping
It may also be wise to consult your local chimney sweep before installing the stove. After your
stove has been installed, it is advisable to have the chimney checked and swept at least once a
year. In any case, if your chimney has not been used for some time, it should be inspected for
cracking, bird nests, etc. before it is put back into use.
1.4 Stove placement/clearance requirements
Minimum Clearance requirements apply if the stove is placed near to combustible materials. Permit-
ted clearances to combustible materials are also indicated on the data plate on the rear of the stove.
In situations where the stove is to be tted into a brick or non-combustible recess, we rec-
ommend that the stove is installed with at least 10 cm clearance to the wall, this will allow
heat to circulate around the stove; also the maintenance of the outside stove is easier. When
applied to masonry, a layer of wallpaper is normally classied as a non-combustible surface.