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Almost the same exact thing with me, take the inside pipe apart in two sections, take them outside to brush with a steel bristle brush, inspect to make sure nothing is rusted or rusted through, stand on the stove to shove the brush up with a garbage bag taped around the bottom, bring it back down and put everything back together, hit it with some stove polish and I'm good to go!Just a question, my plastic brush like the one that you have pictured is VERY tight inside the 6" pipe, is yours like that or is it easier to move up and down? I even years ago took it back to the stove shop and they tried it on a piece of pipe and said "it's the right size, it's tight but should ease up with time" but it didn't, it is very tough to push up and down but at least that way I know it did the job although it is only fine soot that I get since I burn hot, never any tar like creosote which is great!
Almost the same exact thing with me, take the inside pipe apart in two sections, take them outside to brush with a steel bristle brush, inspect to make sure nothing is rusted or rusted through, stand on the stove to shove the brush up with a garbage bag taped around the bottom, bring it back down and put everything back together, hit it with some stove polish and I'm good to go!
Just a question, my plastic brush like the one that you have pictured is VERY tight inside the 6" pipe, is yours like that or is it easier to move up and down? I even years ago took it back to the stove shop and they tried it on a piece of pipe and said "it's the right size, it's tight but should ease up with time" but it didn't, it is very tough to push up and down but at least that way I know it did the job although it is only fine soot that I get since I burn hot, never any tar like creosote which is great!