drpud
01-29-2013, 03:14 PM
Hi everyone
I decided to "graduate" this year from my 2 X 4 flat pan to a drop flue pan. I had a 2 X 5 drop flue pan locally made and it is a beautiful piece of workmanship. I decided to tackle the arch myself and practice my MIG skills and had a Homer Simpson moment. The arch design is similar to the Davy Jones model on Trimble 3-D and I made the smoke stack base 24 " W x 10 " L x 24 " high and tapered it to 12 " W X 10 " L at the top to accomodate an 8 " smoke stack. I forgot to allow for the nice rolled edge on the rear of the pan which sticks out 1 1/2 " (insert D'oh !! here) so I can either cut off this edge and use my existing base or build a new shorter (approximately 10 " high) base which won't taper but will accomodate an 8 " stack or build a new tapered smoke stack base which will accomodate a 6 or 7 " stack. With bricking over board I have approximately 1 1/2 " clearance from the bottom of the flues. Any help would be great.
Thanks
Paul
I decided to "graduate" this year from my 2 X 4 flat pan to a drop flue pan. I had a 2 X 5 drop flue pan locally made and it is a beautiful piece of workmanship. I decided to tackle the arch myself and practice my MIG skills and had a Homer Simpson moment. The arch design is similar to the Davy Jones model on Trimble 3-D and I made the smoke stack base 24 " W x 10 " L x 24 " high and tapered it to 12 " W X 10 " L at the top to accomodate an 8 " smoke stack. I forgot to allow for the nice rolled edge on the rear of the pan which sticks out 1 1/2 " (insert D'oh !! here) so I can either cut off this edge and use my existing base or build a new shorter (approximately 10 " high) base which won't taper but will accomodate an 8 " stack or build a new tapered smoke stack base which will accomodate a 6 or 7 " stack. With bricking over board I have approximately 1 1/2 " clearance from the bottom of the flues. Any help would be great.
Thanks
Paul