Orphaned Water Heater — Oversized Shared Flue After High-Efficiency Furnace Replacement
Claim: When a high-efficiency furnace replaces a conventional atmospheric furnace that shared a B-vent chimney with a water heater, the remaining water heater is “orphaned” on a flue now too large for it to draft safely — a classic, silent CO hazard in BC homes with pre-2000 gas systems.
Mechanism
Conventional (atmospheric) gas furnaces and standard storage water heaters were often connected to the same B-vent chimney. The furnace’s large heat output warmed the shared flue, creating strong stack-effect draft that carried both appliances’ exhaust gases outside.
High-efficiency condensing furnaces (≥90% AFUE) exhaust through separate PVC pipe via a sidewall or direct-vent termination — they do not use the B-vent chimney at all. When the old furnace is replaced with a high-efficiency unit:
- The water heater is left alone on the original B-vent chimney
- The chimney is now dramatically oversized for the water heater’s lower input (typically 36,000–60,000 BTU/h vs. the previous combined 150,000–200,000 BTU/h)
- Without the furnace’s heat to warm the flue and drive draft, the water heater cannot generate enough stack effect in the oversized vent
- Exhaust gases stall, cool, condense, and can reverse — spilling CO into the mechanical room or living space1
- The oversized flue also allows cold outdoor air to pour down the chimney during off-cycles, further chilling the flue and making the next startup even more likely to stall
Why this is a hidden hazard: the water heater appears to operate normally. The flame is lit, the burner cycles. The failure is at the flue level — exhaust is not venting, or is reversing — and there is no appliance-level symptom until a CO detector triggers or an occupant feels symptoms.
Solutions
Three remediation routes, in order of permanence:
- Chimney liner — install a properly sized flexible stainless liner inside the existing B-vent chimney, reducing the flue diameter to match the water heater’s input. Preserves the existing appliance. The liner must be sized per CSA B149.1 tables — requires a licensed gas fitter + TSBC permit. Cost: 3,000+ depending on chimney height and access.23
- Direct-vent water heater replacement — replace the atmospheric water heater with a direct-vent or power-vent model that does not use the B-vent chimney. Permanently eliminates the shared-flue dependency. The B-vent chimney is then decommissioned or capped. Cost: 3,500 installed.4
- Power venter added — install a power venter (inline fan) at the B-vent outlet to provide positive draft for the existing water heater. Less common; adds a mechanical component that requires its own maintenance.
Scope
- Applies specifically when: (a) a high-efficiency furnace was installed and (b) a conventional atmospheric water heater remained on the original shared B-vent
- Does not apply if the water heater was already direct-vent or power-vent before the furnace upgrade
- Does not apply if the furnace replacement included upgrading the water heater simultaneously — the correct practice
- BC: the furnace installer should flag this at time of high-efficiency furnace installation; if they did not, the risk persists until assessed — ask your licensed gas fitter explicitly
Idea Compass
North: Where this comes from
- gas-appliance-venting (Home Systems) — the parent venting note; this is the most common venting failure scenario in post-2000 BC furnace upgrades
- chimney-flue (Home Systems) — the B-vent chimney structure that the shared flue occupies
East: Tensions / failure
- Backdrafting Is the CO Entry Point for Natural-Draft Gas Appliances (Home Systems) — the orphaned-flue failure IS backdrafting; this note names the specific cause
- smoke-co-detectors (Home Systems) — CO detector adjacency is the only detection layer while the orphaned flue is unaddressed
South: Where this leads
- Direct-Vent Sealed Combustion Eliminates Backdraft and Depressurization Risk (Home Systems) — the permanent fix (replace the water heater with direct-vent)
- water-heater (Home Systems) — the appliance decision couples with the venting decision at replacement time
West: What’s similar
- A cracked or undersized flue liner in a masonry chimney — same failure mode (inadequate draft → CO spillage), different structural cause
Sources
Footnotes
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Gold Standard Inspections, a home inspection company — orphaned water heater flues: cause (oversized vent after furnace removal), CO risk, and remediation options — https://www.goldstandardinspectioncompany.com/orpahned-water-heater-flues/ ↩
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HomeAdvisor / Angi (US cost aggregator) — chimney liner installation cost 2025: stainless flex liner 90/foot; full install 3,800 — https://www.homeadvisor.com/cost/heating-and-cooling/install-chimney-liner/ (US figures; indicative for BC — verify with local licensed gas fitter quotes) ↩
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Technical Safety BC — Directive: Vent and Chimney Sizing for Category I appliances; smallest permitted vent size shall be used; CSA B149.1 compliance required — https://www.technicalsafetybc.ca/regulatory-resources/regulatory-notices/directive-vent-and-chimney-sizing ↩
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AceTech Ltd, a Metro Vancouver plumbing company — water heater replacement costs 2025; installed range 3,500 for standard tank; direct-vent models in similar range — https://acetechltd.ca/2025/09/16/hot-water-heater-installation-guide/ ↩