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HARRY BARKER

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I need minimum 3/8" thick board to go under woodstove to meet code...building inspector forgot the name of the stuff but said it was like homasote and could be cut with a sheetrock knife...anyone know the name of the stuff? i have searched but all i come up with is the fancy stove boards/hearth type things.
 
Edit: The only other one I am aware of is hardibacker - but apparently the manufacturer has changed the composition and now hardibacker is not recommended.

Shari
 
I can also remember a product called eterboard. I don't know if it still around.
 
It is called micore and if you google it, you will eventually find the company and can do a dealer locator. Many dry wall whole salers have it. It is soft and you have to put hardi backer or durarock over it. It comes in 1/2 thick sheets 4x8. I think I paid about 80 cents a square foot.

You can't get anything with a higher R value. I think it has an R value of 1.03 or something like that. I ended up with 1 inch of micore 1 inch of hardibacker and then my finished tile on top, well over the R-Value of 2 they look for.
 
I used two 1/2" x 48" x 48" sheets of MARINITE 1 from ARMIL/CFS INC. with dura rock above and below then tiled over the top for a flush hearth. It was not cheap @ $575. shipped from Illinois! It is a ridged furnace board that can be cut with a sheetrock knife or circular saw just don't breath the dust.
I could not find or locate any body locally that would order Micore for me, so I was forced to find another alternative.
So far (2 months) the tile and grout have not flexed enough to crack with a 689# stove sitting on it.

Winter2009-2010012-640x480.jpg



kfhines
 
I just purchased a sheet of PCS cer-wool HP board 1" x 24x36 good for 2100 deg. $60. got it from a local refractories supply out fit. I needed it to replace the insulation panels inside the stove above the secondaries. If you framed it with angle iron and set your tiles the old way you would be good to go. Probably the same a KAO board just different mfg.
 
The Micore is soft yes, but provides unequaled R-Value of anything out there. The Micore does require another substrate such as hardiboard, wonderboard, or durarock in order to provide the platform for the finish application. The hardiboard distributes the weight with no issue.

I took no chances and overbuilt my hearth in the R-Value department. I've seen some hearths that frankly, I would have a hard time sleeping at night knowing I had a fire burning in my stove.
 
I do not know or remember which kind ( one of the cement boards though) that they are adding foam beads to, to reduce the weight. Doesn't do much for fire protection. Maybe it is one of durarock brands.
 
I just went to the hardi websight and it still appears you can use it. It does transfer heat but will not burn. Any thoughts?


Its possible that the Hadribacker we get in the UK is slightly different than what you get but I was using some recently and put a bit on the fire to see how it held up.

It didn't burn at all but did de-laminate after it had been in a fire for a good length of time, I wouldn't worry about that if I were using it as long as it wasn't actually in the fire all the time.

Another cement based board that I have clad some sections of a building with was called Marley Eternit board, THIS Wiki page suggests it is suitable for use as fire protection but that wasn't what I used it for so can't comment much.
 

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