Guswah
ArboristSite Lurker
I'm building a Russian banya (sauna) in a standalone building. In a traditional banya, a woodstove projects through a passage in the wall and into a separate room where wood is fed into the stove thus separating it from the "hot" room. I framed the wall that separates the two rooms with fir lumber and left an opening with about four inches clearance all around the stove. It's a little late, but now I'm worried that the opening might have been bigger and that heat from the woodstove in the opening could eventually start the wall on fire.
Currently the entire wood-framed wall is fiberglass insulated and clad with fireproof drywall. Over that, I've installed a layer of quarter-inch cement backing board. The opening itself is likewise covered with those materials, but I've also cemented in a course of refractory bricks around the opening's perimeter. The space now remaining is about an inch and a half all around the woodstove.
I wish I knew what the shell temperature of the woodstove will be once it is operational, but I do not. It's a Fisher stove -- the old type without double walls, chosen specifically for this purpose. After all, we want that thing to radiate heat quickly. My question is what to do with the remaining inch and a half of clearance to best isolate the opening from the stove's outer surface where it passes between both rooms. Another course of brick? Fiberglass insulation? Nothing at all? What will provide the best protection from the stove's surface?
I'm grateful for any discussion anybody cares to offer!
Currently the entire wood-framed wall is fiberglass insulated and clad with fireproof drywall. Over that, I've installed a layer of quarter-inch cement backing board. The opening itself is likewise covered with those materials, but I've also cemented in a course of refractory bricks around the opening's perimeter. The space now remaining is about an inch and a half all around the woodstove.
I wish I knew what the shell temperature of the woodstove will be once it is operational, but I do not. It's a Fisher stove -- the old type without double walls, chosen specifically for this purpose. After all, we want that thing to radiate heat quickly. My question is what to do with the remaining inch and a half of clearance to best isolate the opening from the stove's outer surface where it passes between both rooms. Another course of brick? Fiberglass insulation? Nothing at all? What will provide the best protection from the stove's surface?
I'm grateful for any discussion anybody cares to offer!