DuraFlex Chimney Cleaning in Tuckahoe, NY | Sterling Chimney Cleaning Yonkers
DuraFlex chimney cleaning and liner service in Tuckahoe typically runs $280–$520 for a full sweep with inspection, and most jobs we book here are completed same-day. We’re Sterling Chimney Cleaning Yonkers — DuraFlex specialists and an independent service provider, not manufacturer-authorized — and the reason Tuckahoe homeowners keep our number handy is simple: Gary Murphy, our owner and lead technician, has spent 11 years personally crawling the century-old multi-flue chimneys this village is built on, and we stock the exact UltraFlex 316Ti and DuraLiner components these houses actually need. Call (844) 660-6590 for a free estimate.
Why Tuckahoe Residents Choose Us for DuraFlex Service
We’ve cleaned DuraFlex liners in Tuckahoe’s original railroad-suburb blocks for over a decade. The village’s housing stock — late-Victorian, Colonial Revival, and Craftsman-era homes packed onto narrow lots — presents chimney problems you don’t see in mid-century Westchester subdivisions. Two flues side by side, clay tiles fractured from a century of fuel switches, and DuraFlex retrofits from the 1970s that were never properly sized to the appliance.
Gary Murphy grew up in Yonkers’ Nodine Hill neighborhood and learned the trade through Westchester Community College’s Building Trades program before spending years on real jobs across the Hudson Valley. For the past 11 years, he’s run Sterling Chimney Cleaning himself — doing the inspections, climbing the ladders, and explaining what he found to the homeowner face-to-face. No dispatched crews, no subcontractors. Over 1,100 homeowners have trusted us, and our 1,142 verified reviews averaging 4.7 stars reflect that consistency.
We use OEM DuraFlex liners and fittings because aftermarket parts rarely match the precise diameters and locking mechanisms these systems require. If a liner is repairable with a patch section, we do that. Full replacement only happens when the existing liner is compromised beyond safe repair. I’ll tell you what I see, not what sells.
Common DuraFlex Chimney Cleaning Problems We Solve in Tuckahoe
- Glazed creosote that rotary brushes cannot remove. During the 1970s oil embargo, wood-burning inserts were retrofitted into Tuckahoe chimneys already sized for coal or oil flues. The oversized flue slowed draft, cooled smoke, and baked creosote into a glass-hard glaze. Standard rotary brushing won’t touch it — we use specialized chain-flail and chemical treatments, then verify with a camera inspection.
- Corrosion of DuraFlex AL50 aluminum liners from acidic condensate. Tuckahoe homes that switched from oil to gas heating produce sulfuric acid condensate that attacks aluminum. The AL50 was marketed as a cost-effective liner, but in the Bronx River valley’s damp climate, we’ve seen five-year-old AL50 liners pinholed and leaking. We upgrade these to UltraFlex 316Ti stainless steel, which handles condensate without degrading.
- Liner collapse at the clay-to-DuraFlex transition point. In Tuckahoe’s Crestwood neighborhood and surrounding original housing blocks, century-old chimneys were built with clay tile liners that terminate in rough, uneven throats. When DuraFlex was inserted decades later without proper anchoring, thermal expansion and contraction gradually pulls the liner downward until it kinks or collapses at the transition. We rebuild these connections with proper support collars and insulation.
- Expansion joint failure on 316Ti liners installed in the 1990s. Early UltraFlex installations used expansion joints that weren’t rated for the thermal cycling these chimneys see during Tuckahoe’s cold, wet winters from October through April. After 25–30 years, stress cracks appear at the joint. We cut out the failed section, install a current-spec expansion joint, and sleeve the surrounding liner if needed.
- Moisture intrusion through uncapped abandoned flues. Tuckahoe’s original two-flue chimneys frequently had one flue lined with DuraFlex while the other was abandoned and left open. Moisture from the Bronx River valley corridor collects in these uncapped flues, accelerates mortar erosion, and bleeds through to the active flue. We install custom multi-flue caps that seal the entire chimney top.
DuraFlex Service in Tuckahoe: What Local Conditions Mean for Your Equipment
Tuckahoe’s original brick chimneys were built with two parallel flues — one for a coal-fired boiler and one for a fireplace — and during the 1970s oil embargo, homeowners frequently inserted a single DuraFlex liner into one flue while abandoning the other, leaving the abandoned flue uncapped and collecting moisture that now accelerates mortar decay. This isn’t a theoretical problem. Walk the blocks near the Metro-North station, past the compact Victorian and Craftsman homes on Maple Street and the surrounding original housing stock, and you’re looking at chimneys where this exact scenario has been playing out for fifty years. The moisture from that uncapped flue doesn’t stay put. It wicks through the wythe — the internal brick divider between flues — and attacks the DuraFlex liner’s insulation from the outside while simultaneously spalling the exterior brick face. We’ve pulled liners in Tuckahoe that looked fine from the firebox view but were soaked and corroded where they passed the abandoned flue. Proper cleaning isn’t just about creosote removal here; it’s about identifying whether your two-flue chimney is actually functioning as a single compromised system. That’s why our DuraFlex inspections in Tuckahoe always include both flues, even the one you haven’t used since the Carter administration.
DuraFlex Models & Products We Service in Tuckahoe
We stock and service the full DuraFlex product line most commonly found in Tuckahoe’s historic housing stock:
- UltraFlex 316Ti — Our go-to replacement for corroded AL50 liners and new relining jobs. The titanium-stabilized stainless steel resists the acidic condensate that Tuckahoe’s gas conversions produce, and we keep 6″, 7″, and 8″ diameters on the truck for same-day installation.
- DuraLiner — Used for fireplace relining where insulation and zero-clearance ratings matter. We stock the oval-to-round adapters needed for Tuckahoe’s shallow fireplace flues.
- DuraFlex AL30 — Found in many 1970s Tuckahoe retrofits. We clean and inspect these where they’re still functional, but we flag them for upgrade when corrosion appears. AL30 patch sections are available for temporary repairs.
- DuraFlex AL50 — The heavier aluminum liner that was supposed to handle condensing appliances better than AL30. In practice, Tuckahoe’s damp Bronx River valley climate cuts its lifespan short. We replace these with 316Ti rather than attempting repeated repairs.
All fittings, connectors, and support components are OEM DuraFlex. Aftermarket parts we’ve encountered in the field — off-brand flex pipe from hardware stores, generic support collars — don’t match the locking mechanisms and have failed during inspection. We won’t install them.
DuraFlex Service Pricing in Tuckahoe
| Service | Typical Range in Tuckahoe |
|---|---|
| Annual DuraFlex chimney sweep + Level 1 inspection | $180 – $280 |
| Deep creosote removal (glazed buildup, chemical treatment) | $320 – $480 |
| DuraFlex liner inspection with video scan | $240 – $340 |
| Partial liner repair (patch section, joint replacement) | $450 – $780 |
| Full DuraFlex relining (UltraFlex 316Ti, typical Tuckahoe flue) | $2,800 – $4,200 |
| Multi-flue cap installation (seals abandoned + active flues) | $380 – $620 |
What drives cost: accessibility of the chimney top on Tuckahoe’s narrow lots, whether we need to remove an existing insert to access the liner, and the condition of the clay tile throat we’re transitioning from. Our free estimate includes a full camera inspection — you’ll see exactly what we see before any work starts. Call (844) 660-6590 to schedule; estimates are free and we can usually book within 48 hours.
Serving Tuckahoe, NY — Our Local Coverage Area
We’re based in the Tuckahoe 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 — DuraFlex Chimney Cleaning in Tuckahoe
Yes — in fact, that’s the most common DuraFlex installation we do in Tuckahoe. The clay tiles in these century-old chimneys are typically fractured or spalled from thermal cycling and fuel conversion damage. We remove the worst of the debris, smooth the transition at the smoke chamber, and run the DuraFlex liner with proper insulation and support. The clay tiles stay in place as a host structure; the DuraFlex becomes the new, safe flue pathway. Call (844) 660-6590 and we’ll assess whether your specific chimney is a candidate.
It can be. In Tuckahoe, we’ve seen five-year-old AL50 aluminum liners pinhole and leak due to acidic condensate — especially in homes that converted from oil to gas heating. The 316Ti stainless liners hold up better, but improper sizing during installation (common in 1970s retrofit work) can cause creosote bypass that smells like soot even when the liner itself is intact. We run a camera to find the exact leak path. Call (844) 660-6590 for a diagnostic inspection — catching this early prevents wall staining and carbon monoxide risk.
DuraFlex produces termination caps for their round liners, but Tuckahoe’s original clay flue tiles are often square or rectangular — 8×8, 8×12, 12×12 — and the clay itself is frequently too degraded to support a standard cap. We fabricate custom multi-flue caps that cover the entire chimney top, sealing both the active DuraFlex liner and any abandoned flue. This is critical in Tuckahoe’s two-flue chimneys where moisture intrusion through an uncapped flue destroys the active liner from the outside.
For wood-burning use: annually, without exception, and in Tuckahoe we recommend mid-season inspection if you’re burning more than three times weekly during our compressed heating season. The village’s cold, wet winters drive heavier use in fewer months, which packs creosote faster. For gas appliance liners: inspect every two years, but annually if the liner is AL-series aluminum or if you’ve had condensate issues previously. Call (844) 660-6590 to set up a recurring schedule — we track your service history and call you when it’s due.
We don’t recommend it, and not just because it’s our business. DuraFlex liner installation requires proper sizing to the appliance outlet, correct insulation for zero-clearance ratings, and support installation that won’t collapse at the clay transition — the exact failure point we see most in Tuckahoe’s century-old chimneys. A liner that drops six inches after the first heating season is a fire and carbon monoxide hazard. Gary Murphy leads every job himself, and the 11 years we’ve spent on these specific chimney types means we know where the hidden problems are before they become emergencies. Call (844) 660-6590 for an estimate — the inspection is free, and you’ll know exactly what you’re dealing with.
Service Areas Near Tuckahoe
We run DuraFlex service calls from our base in Yonkers to surrounding communities including Bronxville, Mount Vernon, Eastchester, and Woodlawn. Tuckahoe’s compact village footprint means we’re rarely more than 15 minutes from any address — same-day response is standard for urgent creosote or liner failure calls.
Book Your DuraFlex Service in Tuckahoe Today
Whether you’re dealing with glazed creosote in a 1970s retrofit, a corroded AL50 liner that needs upgrading to 316Ti, or you just want to know whether that two-flue chimney on your Tuckahoe home is safe to light this season, we’ll give you straight answers and a clear plan. Gary Murphy leads every job personally. Same-day appointments available for urgent issues. Call (844) 660-6590 or request your free estimate now.
Written by Gary Murphy, Owner at Sterling Chimney Cleaning Yonkers, serving Tuckahoe and Westchester County since 2013.