We were new to Silver City, fixing up a single wide mobile home. We wanted to replace our wood stove with a pellet as it was old and messy. Having lived in small towns before, we always try to support local merchants when possible. So we went to Better Chimney.
Unlike you, wise reader of Google reviews, I did not read their online reviews. As of todays date, there are 9 reviews of 1, the lowest score, out of 20 total reviews. After today, that will be 10 lowest possible reviews. That should tell you everything you need to know about them.
They sold us one of their most upscale stoves for our small home. $5900 for the stove and new chimney piping. I thought it was a high price, but went ahead with it. Didnt want to fiddle with a job that could be dangerous if done wrong, even though I'm a capable DIYer. Since we already had a through the roof jack for the old wood stove I told them to just connect the new piping through the existing roof jack.
We had it installed in summer of 21 so we'd be ready for the winter heating season. I began using the stove in September of 21. Almost every time we used the stove, a red warning light would come on saying High Temperature Flue. Once the red light came on, the stove blowers would not function correctly. I would have to unplug the entire stove to reset it to make it work again. Then the red light would appear again and I'd have to unplug and replug to get it to go through another burn cycle.
They came out several times to try to fix that, but were never successful. They would tell me nothing was wrong with it. By mid November, and I was still heating by house with our gas furnace. They became surly and told me that the warranty was void, so I began contacting the stove manufacturer, Thelin. At that point, they offerred to take back and refund the stove, but leave the existing pipe for which we had paid $1100. I took that offer to be done with the rude and incompetent service we had received there.
By then I had read the Many negative google reviews of their company, and decided to buy and install a new stove myself. I purchased a new pellet stove elsewhere and consulted their instructions. The first thing I noticed was that the manual said that 4" pipe was needed for high altitudes, as the air is thinner and you need more air flow or you would have a dangerously hot flue. That was when I noticed that Better Chimney had installed 3" pipe on our stove, as well as putting in two 45 degree bends to make the stove fit to the existing roof jack. All of a sudden I understood why their stove installation flashed a red high temp flue warning. They had used inadequate sized pipe for this 6000' elevation.
I had to rip out their entire pipe installation and put in 4" stove pipe to the tune of $800 and my own labor. By moving the stove about 4 inches off center on the hearth, I was able to run the new pipe straight up to the roof jack. I placed a container of pellets on the wider side of the hearth, and it looks perfectly centered now.
I also learned from the stove instructions that a cleanout T should have been placed at the rear of the stove to make chimney cleaning easy. Just screw off the bottom of the T and run a brush up and down and the pipe cleaning was a snap. Better Chimney simply installed a right angle pipe with no cleanout T, which makes cleaning harder. Cleanout Ts are a standard of any pellet stove installation.
I installed my new $1700 stove and $800 4" chimney pipe, and heated my house from January on with no problems of any sort. After heating season was over, I completed my own pipe and stove cleaning to the manual instructions, which required some disassembly and cleaning of the blower, burn pots, and pipes. Not a pleasant job, but it is now clean and waiting to once again work flawlessly for another season.
This is a job you can do yourself if you're fairly handy. If not, most handymen or carpenters could do this job better and cheaper than Better Chimney. Rude and incompetent is my experience with them.