The home currently has a central heat and air system running on geothermal. We do not have a regular need for a fireplace, but with times being unsure and the possibility of having no power in a storm or similar, I would really like to recomission the fireplace for use and get a ton or two of coal to have on hand. It couldn't hurt to use it to boost the geothermal on very cold nights, and my family loves to sit by a roaring fire with some cocoa and enjoy each other's company.
I am having a hard time finding a chimney sweep in the area that could check it out and quote on the job. I have pulled the covers and looked up the chimney- it's clear, black from a century of fires and unlined stacked brick.
I was thinking the only way to make it useable would be to run a stainless liner down it and add a damper. Would a damper at the top of the chimney work, or do each side of the fireplace need a dedicated damper? I am new to all this. If I can't find someone to do the work, is it a doable DIY project? My chimney is a straight shot up. Can I just drop the liner from the top, tie it into a top damper cap and mortar the cap in place, then use a refractory cement or something to make a smoke box transition from the fireplace lintels to the liner?
I was thinking about pulling the divider wall, bricking in the back and making it a wood fireplace, but being in KY coal isn't too hard to come by so I figure it's less costly, more original and easier to just make it work as it was intended originally. I believe it was last used about 10 years ago when they installed the geothermal, and was used regularly since it was built until that time.
Am I barking up the wrong tree? I really don't want to have this beautiful fireplace sitting there unusable, but would I be better off buying a backup generator for the geothermal? The fireplace is so... fireplace though, right?
Thanks, all!