Ask most homeowners to sketch their chimney and you’ll get a firebox and a pipe. The critical part they leave out sits right between: an inverted funnel, often stepped brick, that gathers smoke from the wide firebox and compresses it into the narrow flue. That’s the smoke chamber, and it works harder than any other surface in the system.
Why it fouls faster than the flue
Why it gets skipped
Geometry. Flue brushes are shaped for a straight pipe; the chamber is a widening funnel with shelves, cleaning it properly taks purpose-shaped tools and access from below. A rushed sweep that runs rods through the flue and calls it done has cleaned the highway and left the on-ramp filthy. It’s the first place we check when a “recently swept” chimney still smells like campfire.
What proper chamber cleaning looks like
Purpose-shaped tools working the full funnel under containment, the shelf ledges cleared individually, and a look at the chamber’s surface condition while it’s bare, smooth parged chambers shed smoke better and foul slower, so if yours is raw stepped brick, we’ll tell you what parging would change. Details on the smoke chamber cleaning page, or just book the look.