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9
Dutchwest
®
Non-Catalytic Convection Heater
30002278
A lush-mounted sheet metal cover may be used on one
side only. If covers must be used on both sides, each
cover must be mounted on non-combustible spacers
at least 1” (25 mm) clear of the wall. Your Dutchwest
dealer or your local building inspector can provide de-
tails of other approved methods of passing a chimney
connector through a combustible wall. In Canada, this
type of installation must conform to CAN/CSA-B365,
Installation Code for Solid Fuel Burning Appliances and
Equipment.
NOTE:
Do not vent your Dutchwest stove into a factory-
built (zero-clearance) ireplace. These appliances and
their chimneys are speciically designed as a unit for
use as ireplaces. It may void the listing or be hazard-
ous to adapt them for any other use.
Floor Protection
A tremendous amount of heat radiates from the bottom
plate of your Dutchwest stove. The loor area directly
under and around the stove will require protection from
radiant heat as well as from stray sparks or embers that
may escape the irebox.
Heat protection is provided by the MHSC Bottom Heat
Shield. Spark, ember and thermal protection must be
provided by a loor protector constructed with noncom-
bustible material as speciied.
In the US and Canada most installations will require
that the bottom heat shield must be attached. Only
when the stove is placed on a completely noncombusti-
ble surface such as unpainted concrete over earth may
it be used without the heat shield.
Even when the bottom heat shield is installed, you
must provide special protection to the loor beneath.
For installation with the heat shield attached, use an
approved 5/8” (16mm) noncombustible hearth pad with
K = 0.84 BTU/in ft
2
hr °F or an equivalent material with
an R-value of at least 0.744. (Refer to “How to Deter-
mine if Alternate Floor Protection Materials are Accept-
able” section)The loor protector may be covered with
a decorative noncombustible material if desired. Do not
obstruct the space under the heater.
Protection requirements vary somewhat between the
United States and Canada as follows:
U.S. Installations: The loor protector is required under
the stove and must extend at least 16” from the front
and left (loading door) side of the stove, and at least 6”
from the right side and rear. (Fig. 12)
In Canada: a noncombustible loor protector is required
under the heater also. The loor protector must extend
18” (457mm) from the front and left (loading door) side
of the stove, and at least 8” (203mm) from the right side
and rear. (Fig. 12)
Due to the side loading door, loor protector require-
ments call for more protection on the left side than on
the right. If you wish a more balanced look, increase
the other side of the hearth as well. Do not reduce side
protection under any circumstances.
How to Determine if Alternate Floor Protection Ma-
terials are Acceptable
All loor protection must be noncombustible (i.e. met-
als, brick, stone, mineral iber boards, etc.). Any organic
materials (i.e. plastics, wood paper products, etc.) are
combustible and must not be used. The loor protection
speciied includes some form of thermal designation
such as R-value (thermal resistance) or k-factor (ther-
mal conductivity).
ST799
Fig. 13
Combustible supporting timbers (A) may lie beneath
ireplace hearths; such situations require additional loor
protection.
A
B
A
B
A
C
A
B
B
A
Model
U.S.
Canada
2478 49
¹⁄₂
” x 45” 53
¹⁄₂
” x 49” (1359 mm x 1245 mm)
ST798
Fig. 12
Be sure to follow exactly the minimum loor protection
requirements on all four sides of the stove.
Minimum Dimensions for Noncombustible Floor
Protectors (Width x Depth):
(5/8” /16mm thick min. with an R-value of at least 0.744)
U.S.
Canada
A.
16”
18” (457 mm)
B.
6”
8” (203 mm)
C.
10”
10” (254 mm)