Flue - The space or passage in a chimney through which smoke, gas, or fumes ascend. Each passage is called a flue, which together and including the surrounding masonry make up the chimney.
flue The hollow passage that carries smoke and heat to the outside from the fireplace or furnace. flue liner ...
Flue Lining: Metal (usually stainless steel) tube within a flue essential for high output gas appliances such as boilers. May also be manufactured from clay and built into the flue.
Flue A smoke duct in a chimney, or a proprietary pipe serving a heat producing appliance such as a central heating boiler. Footings Older, usually shallow, form or foundation of brick or stone.
BOX FLUE TILES Open ended box shaped tiles which were built into the thickness of the walls, behind the plaster, of a room heated by a hypocaust. BOX PEW ...
Flue gas stack at GRES-2 Power Plant in Ekibastus, Kazakhstan is 420 metres tall[3] ...
STACK A flue or chimney, or group of chimnies. STAINED GLASS Glass coloured by mixing pigments inherently in the glass, by fusing colored metallic oxides onto the glass, or by painting and baking transparent colors on the glass surface.
Balanced (or room sealed ) Flue - common flue type normally serving gas appliances, which allows air to be drawn to the appliance whilst also allowing fumes to escape. Baluster - a post or vertical pillar supporting a handrail or parapet rail.
Breast - A projection of a wall into a room, containing the flue and hearth of a fireplace and/or; The wall under a window sill, down to the floor ...
The effect of this innovation was that the layout of rooms was dictated by the axis of the chimney flue, and led to the warm room becoming the central room of the hammam.
Shafted Chimneys - chimneys in which the flue continued beyond the stack as a shaft usually square, often set diagonally, circular or octagonal and sometimes decoratively treated, eg with a twist. They are a particular feature of tudor architecture.
chimney pot : Tudor or Medieval Revival style buildings often have wide, very tall chimneys with round or octagonal "pots" on top of each flue. Multiple chimneys have separate flues, and each flue has its own chimney pot.
Chimneys: decorative, separate chimney pot for each flue Illustration: 155 Depew Ave. Illustration: John J. Albright mansion on West Ferry St. (Demolished) ...
Parge (pargetting, parging) - Decorative external plastering in repetitive patterns. Render for the inside of a chimney flue. Party-wall - A wall common to two buildings of a terraced row.
chimney pot - a pipe placed on top of a chimney, usually of earthenware, that functions as a continuation of the flue and improves draft.
See also: Brick, House, Floor, Frame, Door
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