Drive any DFW suburb built since the 1980s and half the “chimneys” you’ll see are chases: wood-framed towers, sided to match the house, containing a factory-built metal flue. No masonry anywhere, and that changes what the top of the structure needs. Enter the chase cover.
The job: a crown made of sheet metal
The chase cover is a fabricated metal pan capping the chase’s framed opening, sloped (in theory) to shed water, with a raised collar where the flue pipe passes through and a cap above that. It does for the chase what the crown does for masonry: keeps weather out of everything below. The difference: below a crown sits brick; below a chase cover sits framing lumber, sheathing, and often the ceiling of your living room, materials with far less patience for water.
Why they fail: chemistry plus geometry
The material sin: builders overwhelmingly installed galvanized steel, cheapest at construction, and its zinc coating is sacrificial. DFW’s rain-heat cycles consume it, rust follows, and rust eventually perforates. The orange ring around many chase collars is this process mid-story
The geometry sin: flat-fabricated pans without cross-breaks (stiffening bends that create slope) pond water instead of shedding it, standing water accelerates the chemistry exactly where the pan is weakest
What failure costs, and why it hides: a perforated or seam-failed cover drips into the chase interior, wetting framing and insulation for months before anything shows in the house, and when it shows, it’s a ceiling stain that looks like a roof leak, sending everyone hunting in the wrong place. Wood-framed chases also grow mold in ways masonry never will. If your home has a sided chimney chase and the original cover, it’s worth one deliberate look,
replacement in stainless is a solved, permanent fix.
We’ll check it with the photos to prove either answer.