Home
Services
Inspections
Rumford Fireplaces
Before & After Pictures
Customer Feedback
FAQ
LINKS
About Us
Contact
Rumford Fireplaces 

This is a picture of the rumford that was completed.  If you you look at the picture below you can see the box during the construction process.

This is our rumford firebox during construction process.  It is considered "rumfordizing" when it is built inside the exsisting system.

Here is another rumford firebox that we layed. 
This is how the smoke chamber was tied into the firebox and the flue (pipe).  This will help to make the system flow better.  With everything runny together smoothly this will allow the system to be less likely to have smoking problems, and help to decrease the risks of dead heading.

What is a Rumford Fireplace, Anyway?

by Jim Buckley  ( http://www.rumford.com/articleWhat.html )
Rumford fireplaces are tall and shallow to reflect more heat, and they have streamlined throats to eliminate turbulence and carry away the smoke with little loss of heated room air.

Rumford fireplaces were common from 1796, when Count Rumford first wrote about them, until about 1850. Jefferson had them built at Monticello, and Thoreau listed them among the modern conveniences that everyone took for granted. There are still many original Rumford fireplaces - often buried behind newer renovations-throughout the country.

Count Rumford, for whom the fireplace is named, was born Benjamin Thompson in Woburn, Massachusetts in 1753 and, because he was a loyalist, he left (abruptly) with the British in 1776. He spent much of his life as an employee of the Bavarian government where he received his title, "Count of the Holy Roman Empire." Rumford is known primarily for the work he did on the nature of heat.

Back in England, Rumford applied his knowledge of heat to the improvement of fireplaces. He made them smaller and shallower with widely angled covings so they would radiate better. And he streamlined the throat, or in his words "rounded off the breast" so as to "remove those local hindrances which forcibly prevent the smoke from following its natural tendency to go up the chimney..."

Rumford wrote two papers detailing his improvements on fireplaces in 1796 and in1798.* He was well known and widely read in his lifetime and almost immediately in the 1790s his "Rumford fireplace" became state-of-the-art worldwide.

Today, with the extensive restoration of old and historic houses and the renewed popularity of early American and classical architecture in new construction, Rumford fireplaces are enjoying a comeback. Rumford fireplaces are generally appreciated for their tall classic elegance and their heating efficiency.

Site Mailing List 

All Out Chimney Sweep, LLC
6427 Park South Drive
Charlotte, NC 28210
Phone: (704) 553-1908
Email: dsteelefan@aol.com


 

Site Powered By
    Olympic Web Design Site Builder
    Online web site design