• @Death_Equity
    link
    381 month ago

    I hope you get your chimney cleaned often because that flue probably looks bituminous otherwise.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        241 month ago

        You know the grease you see on the range hood or ceilings of your kitchen/restaurants above the cooktop/stove?

        Same thing would happen in your chimney, but combined with wood fire ash.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          5
          edit-2
          1 month ago

          But the oil is being burnt?

          Is there something from the combustion process that causes issues?

          Or are you saying some won’t immediately combust and would go up the chimney?

          Would be interesting to see research into this.

          • @Death_Equity
            link
            231 month ago

            Nothing burns cleanly in a fireplace, even gas ones except for ventless ones.

            Anything you burn in a fireplace like wood, oil, fat etc. will produce organic compounds that the fire is unable to break down into non-flammable substances because it does not burn hot enough.

            A wood fireplace accumulates creosote, which can build until it is capable of igniting and cause a chimney fire. Oil and fat combust very poorly and will coat the flue with material that is easier to ignite than creosote. This ends up being a hazard worse than just wood byproducts because they can ignite and then set the creosote burning.

          • @captainlezbian
            link
            41 month ago

            Complete combustion of hydrocarbons is difficult and usually requires specialized equipment for that hydrocarbon. A fireplace is probably for wood (I assume nobody here is throwing cooking oil into a gas fireplace), but it’s not even good at that. Cooking oil will spatter and polymerize