HeatShield Chimney Cleaning in Kensington, CT | Premier Chimney Cleaning Connecticut
HeatShield ceramic chimney liner repair and relining in Kensington, CT typically costs between $1,800 and $4,500 depending on whether we’re patching localized damage with Cerfractory Sealant or installing a full Cerflex liner system. Most Kensington homes with gas-converted, oil-era chimneys need the full relining. We’re Premier Chimney Cleaning Connecticut — an independent HeatShield service provider, not a manufacturer affiliate — and Anthony Perez, our owner and lead technician, handles every job personally across the 06037 ZIP code and surrounding Berlin. Call (833) 719-7193 for a free estimate and same-week scheduling.
Why Kensington Residents Choose Us for HeatShield Service
Eight years, one specialty. That’s the difference.
We’ve completed hundreds of HeatShield ceramic liner installations across Hartford County, and we’ve developed a proprietary technique for diagnosing the specific acid-etching pattern common in Kensington’s gas-converted chimneys. Anthony Perez — our owner, not a dispatcher sending subcontractors — grew up in New Haven’s Fair Haven neighborhood, trained in building systems at Gateway Community College, and apprenticed under a veteran sweep who drilled into him that a chimney is only as safe as the person willing to look at it honestly. Anthony’s the one on your roof, and he’s become the guy Kensington neighbors call because he’ll tell you exactly what he found and why it matters, without padding the invoice.
We invest in HeatShield-certified tools and training because their Cerfractor and Cerflex systems are the only liners we trust for the aggressive freeze-thaw and condensation conditions we see here. We use genuine HeatShield ceramic repair materials — not hardware-store substitutes — alongside DuraFlex, Gelco, Olympia Chimney, Famco, and Copperfield products when the job calls for them. Our 800+ customer reviews at a 4.7-star average reflect completed jobs, not curated testimonials. From annual sweep to full rebuild, we handle the complete chimney lifecycle — no separate contractor needed when problems escalate.
I’d rather give you the straight answer on the roof than a comfortable one at the bottom of the ladder.
Common HeatShield Chimney Cleaning Problems We Solve in Kensington
- Carbonic acid etching on Cerfractor liners. In Kensington’s oversized flues venting 96% efficient gas furnaces, condensed exhaust eats into the ceramic liner’s surface, creating pitting visible on camera within 3–5 years if the liner wasn’t applied with the correct primer. We see this on nearly every 1960s Colonial we inspect in the Chamberlin Highway corridor.
- Crown-to-liner bond separation. The intense freeze-thaw cycling in Berlin’s inland climate repeatedly expands and contracts the crown coating, causing hairline cracks where water wicked past the HeatShield Crown Coat and delaminates the ceramic from the clay tile below. Kensington’s late-season wet snow loads make this worse than in milder river towns.
- Spalling around cleanout doors. In Kensington’s postwar ranches, the brick wythe around uninsulated cleanout doors frosts from the inside out, spalling the mortar and causing the Cerflex liner to lose lateral support and sag at the base. We’ve replaced three such installations in the past two winters alone.
- Acid-washed tile behind “successful” sweeps. Homeowners call us after a basic sweep “passed” their chimney, but our Level 2 inspection finds the clay tile underneath is etched and porous — the sweep never ran a camera. In Kensington’s gas-converted flues, this is a dangerous miss.
- Crown Coat failure from soil moisture wicking. Kensington’s mid-century homes sit on former tobacco farmland with highly acidic clay soil. Ground moisture wicks into the first four brick courses, softening mortar joints long before the crown wears out. Standard Crown Coat applications stop at grade and miss this entirely.
HeatShield Service in Kensington: What Local Conditions Mean for Your Equipment
Kensington’s mid-century homes were built on former tobacco farmland where the clay soil has a high acidity — this ground moisture wicks into the chimney’s first four brick courses, softening mortar joints long before the crown wears out, so our Crown Coat and Cap installations always extend at least 6 inches below grade to wrap the foundation brick, a step unnecessary in neighboring Newington where the soil is more alkaline.
This soil chemistry shapes every HeatShield repair in Cromwell and every job we do in the 06037 ZIP. A Cerflex liner installed without addressing the saturated base will eventually lose support as the wythe deteriorates. We’ve learned to include a full exterior assessment of the first visible courses — not just the crown — before specifying any liner system. The freeze-thaw cycling that hits Hartford County harder than coastal Connecticut compounds the problem: water trapped in softened mortar expands, spalls the brick face, and creates voids where the liner’s lateral support disappears. Our Kensington protocol includes moisture-meter readings at the base and a specific primer selection for the Cerfractory Sealant that accounts for this persistent dampness. It’s extra steps that add time to the estimate, but skipping them is how you get a callback in year three.
HeatShield Models & Products We Service in Kensington
We work with the full HeatShield residential line: Cerfractor for localized ceramic repair and resurfacing, Cerflex for full stainless-reinforced relining, Cerfractory Sealant for tile joint patching and surface restoration, and Crown Coat for flexible waterproof crown resurfacing. We stock genuine HeatShield materials for same-week Kensington turnaround — no waiting on drop-shipped primer or mismatched batch sealant.
Our parts stance is straightforward: genuine HeatShield ceramic repair materials have the lowest documented permeability for the acid-laden gas exhaust common in Kensington’s gas-converted flues. If less than 20% of a clay tile liner is damaged, we patch with Cerfractory Sealant; beyond that, we recommend full Cerflex relining to prevent repeat failures. We don’t substitute aftermarket ceramics that haven’t been tested against Hartford County’s specific condensation chemistry. For caps, we pair HeatShield systems with Gelco or Famco stainless models sized to the reduced flue diameter — critical on Kensington’s converted oil chimneys where the original cap is now three sizes too large.
HeatShield Service Pricing in Kensington
| Service | Typical Range |
|---|---|
| Level 2 Inspection with video scan | $250 – $400 |
| Chimney cleaning & sweep (pre-liner prep) | $200 – $350 |
| Cerfractory Sealant patching (localized repair) | $1,200 – $1,800 |
| Full Cerflex liner installation | $2,800 – $4,500 |
| Crown Coat application (with below-grade extension) | $650 – $1,100 |
| Cap installation (stainless, properly sized) | $350 – $650 |
What drives cost: flue height, accessibility, extent of existing tile damage, and whether we need to address the base moisture issue before liner installation. Every estimate includes the Level 2 inspection — we won’t spec work we haven’t seen. Call (833) 719-7193 for your exact quote; estimates are free and Anthony Perez handles them personally.
Serving Kensington, CT — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Kensington area and know this community well. Use the map below to see our service coverage — if you’re nearby, we can almost certainly help.
FAQs — HeatShield Chimney Cleaning in Kensington
You almost certainly need relining, not just a sweep. Your 1965 chimney was sized for oil exhaust — hot, fast, and voluminous. Natural gas exhaust from a 96% efficient furnace is cooler, denser, and produces carbonic acid when it condenses in that oversized flue. A sweep removes creosote but does nothing about the flue geometry or the acid etching that’s already begun. We see this exact scenario weekly in Kensington’s postwar neighborhoods and on HeatShield repair in Middletown calls. Call (833) 719-7193 and we’ll run a camera to confirm what you’re dealing with — the inspection itself will show you the difference.
Cracking in year one is almost always an installation or specification error, not a product failure. In Kensington, the risk is delamination at the crown-to-liner bond from freeze-thaw cycling — which is why we extend Crown Coat below grade and use the manufacturer-specified primer sequence. We’ve got Cerflex liners in Kensington homes that have passed eight winters without issue. The failures we get called to repair were done by contractors who skipped steps or used non-HeatShield sealant.
Yes — Cerflex is designed to be installed inside existing clay tile, provided the tile is structurally intact enough to serve as a form. We clean the flue with rotary brushes and nylon pads (never steel on softened tile), then apply the Cerfractory Sealant base coat before pulling the continuous stainless-reinforced liner. Full tile removal is only necessary when the clay is spalled or shifted beyond 20% surface area. Our Level 2 inspection determines which path applies to your chimney.
With proper installation and annual inspection, a Cerflex liner carries a lifetime warranty and routinely exceeds 25 years of service. In Kensington specifically, the limiting factor isn’t the liner material — it’s whether the crown and base moisture issues we discussed are addressed at installation. We’ve got Cerflex systems in local homes at year 12 with clean camera scans. Wood-burning accelerates creosote accumulation, so those chimneys need more frequent cleaning, but the liner itself handles the thermal cycling without degradation.
HeatShield doesn’t manufacture caps, but cap selection is critical to liner longevity — especially near the train station where the exposed elevation catches more wind-driven rain. We specify Gelco or Famco stainless steel caps with integrated wind-resistant skirts, sized to your post-liner flue diameter (typically 6 inches on a converted oil chimney, not the original 8×8). The wrong cap — or a “universal” big-box model — lets water sheet down the flue and pool at the smoke shelf, undermining any liner system. Call (833) 719-7193 and we’ll measure for the correct cap during your inspection; estimates are free.
Service Areas Near Kensington
We run HeatShield in New Britain and service calls throughout central Connecticut from our Hartford County base — including Newington (where the alkaline soil changes our Crown Coat protocol), New Haven (where Anthony’s roots run deep), Waterbury, Bridgeport, and Stamford for larger relining projects. Most Kensington appointments schedule within 3–5 business days; emergency crown repairs we often handle same-day.
Book Your HeatShield Service in Kensington Today
Your chimney was built for a different fuel, in a different decade, on soil that never stops wicking moisture. HeatShield’s ceramic systems can handle that — if they’re specified, installed, and maintained by someone who knows what Kensington’s conditions actually do to masonry. Anthony Perez leads every job, from the initial camera inspection to the final cap torque. Same-week appointments available. Call (833) 719-7193 for your free estimate.
Written by Anthony Perez, Owner at Premier Chimney Cleaning Connecticut, serving Kensington and Hartford County since 2016.