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Gas & Wood-Burning Fireplace Experts

Fireplace Repair Fort Wayne, IN

When your fireplace isn’t drawing right, smells off, or won’t stay lit — it’s a safety issue. We diagnose and fix gas and wood-burning fireplaces throughout Fort Wayne and Allen County.

Signs Your Fireplace Needs Professional Attention

Most fireplace problems creep in — a faint gas smell near the hearth, smoke drifting into the room, a pilot light that won’t hold. Fort Wayne homeowners often live with these issues for months, assuming it’s “just how old fireplaces are.” It’s not. Every symptom points to a specific, fixable problem — and ignoring them risks carbon monoxide exposure or fire hazard.

Common fireplace problems in Fort Wayne homes

  • Smoke backdrafting — usually a damper issue, negative air pressure, or blocked flue. Common in tightly sealed newer homes in Aboite and Huntertown where makeup air is insufficient.
  • Gas fireplace won’t ignite or stay lit — faulty thermocouple, dirty pilot assembly, or gas valve failure. Frequent in homes with standing-pilot gas logs not serviced in 5+ years.
  • Cracked firebox — refractory panels crack from thermal cycling. In Fort Wayne’s climate, fireplaces cycle from cold to 1,000 degrees and back dozens of times each winter.
  • Damper stuck open or closed — a stuck-open damper bleeds heated air all winter. A stuck-closed damper is a carbon monoxide trap.
  • Summer fireplace odor — creosote absorbs moisture during humid months (May-August averages 4+ inches of rain monthly), creating a musty, acrid smell.
  • Cracked smoke chamber mortar — cracks allow heat transfer to combustible framing. Most homeowners never see this area above the firebox.

Gas Fireplace Repair

Gas fireplaces are the most common type in Fort Wayne homes built after 1990. Convenient — but not maintenance-free. Most frequent repairs we handle:

  • Thermocouple/thermopile replacement — #1 reason a gas fireplace won’t stay lit
  • Pilot assembly cleaning — carbon buildup restricts gas flow
  • Gas valve diagnosis — when the valve fails, pilot cleaning won’t fix it
  • Direct-vent inspection — wall-vented termination caps get blocked by debris, ice, or animal nesting
  • Glass gasket replacement — degraded seals allow combustion gases into the room

NFPA 211 recommends annual inspection of all gas-fueled fireplaces. Gas units still produce carbon monoxide, have mechanical parts that wear out, and need venting verified annually.

Wood-Burning Fireplace Repair

Fort Wayne’s housing stock — median build year 1972, 15% pre-1940 — means thousands of original masonry fireplaces are in daily winter use. Common repairs:

  • Firebox refractory panel replacement — panels crack and spall from years of direct flame
  • Smoke chamber parging — smoothing corbeled masonry improves draft and eliminates creosote-trapping surfaces
  • Damper repair or top-sealing conversion — many older homes have warped cast-iron throat dampers
  • Hearth extension repair — code requires minimum extension for radiant heat protection
  • Ash dump door replacement — common in 1950s-1970s homes

Fireplace Insert Installation

Open masonry fireplaces can actually pull more heated air out than they produce. A fireplace insert is often the smartest upgrade. We install EPA-certified wood, gas, and pellet inserts — every installation includes a Level 2 chimney inspection and proper flue relining.

When Is It an Emergency?

Call immediately if you notice: gas smell (leave house first), CO alarm, visible flames in chimney, persistent smoke filling the room, or water leaking through the firebox. We offer 24/7 emergency service.

Common Questions

Fireplace Repair FAQ

How do I know if my gas fireplace needs repair or just cleaning?
Yellow, lazy flames or excessive glass fogging usually means cleaning. Won’t ignite, won’t stay lit, or you smell gas — that’s repair territory. A diagnostic visit will tell you definitively.
Why does my fireplace smell bad in summer?
Creosote absorbs moisture during humid months. Fort Wayne’s June-August humidity makes this worse. Fix: thorough sweep plus a top-sealing damper to block humid air when the fireplace is idle.
Can I convert wood-burning to gas?
Yes — gas inserts or log sets work in most masonry fireplaces. Requires a Level 2 inspection and likely flue relining. We handle the full conversion including gas line coordination.
Are cracked firebox panels dangerous?
Hairline cracks are cosmetic. Broken panels, missing chunks, or visibly displaced pieces should be replaced before use — they protect masonry and framing from direct heat.
Do gas fireplaces need annual inspection?
Yes. NFPA 211 recommends it. Gas units produce carbon monoxide, have mechanical safety parts that wear out, and have venting that can become blocked.

Fireplace Not Working Right?

Gas or wood-burning, we’ll find the problem and fix it — honestly and affordably.

Call (260) 555-0199