
Cast-in-Place Liner for Fireplaces & Chimneys | PCE DFW
Prime Chimney Experts — DFW chimney & fireplace specialists. Free inspection, written quote, no surprise fees.
Cast-in-Place Liner for DFW Fireplaces and Chimneys
We use Cast-in-Place Liner where the work demands it, and we bond test every batch of mortar and every veneer adhesive system before it touches a chimney we warranty. Our masonry team has restored more than 1,400 DFW chimneys, and Cast-in-Place Liner is one of the materials we know intimately. The notes below are pulled from our internal QA reference and adapted for the homeowner deciding what specification the chimney mason should follow. Lifetime workmanship warranty applies.
What is Cast-in-Place Liner?
Cast-in-place chimney liners are a poured cement-based refractory liner system installed inside a damaged or deteriorated existing flue. The two dominant systems in DFW are GuardianCFS and HeatShield CeCure. The process: technicians lower an inflatable bladder down the flue, center it, then pump a refractory cement mixture into the annular space between the bladder and the existing flue walls. After 24-72 hours of cure, the bladder is deflated and removed, leaving a smooth, code-compliant, structurally bonded refractory liner. The result rebuilds the flue from inside, restores draft geometry, seals every crack and joint, and adds significant structural rigidity to the existing chimney.
Properties Reference
| Property | Value |
| — | — |
| Compressive strength | Refractory cement: 5,000-8,000 PSI cured |
| Density | 120-135 lb/ft3 |
| Freeze-thaw rating | Excellent |
| Fire rating | UL 1777 listed; ASTM E84 Class A |
| Typical DFW cost | $3,800-$-+ typical residential install |
Where We Use Cast-in-Place Liner in DFW
Cast-in-Place Liner shows up in the following applications across DFW fireplaces and chimneys: Restoration of existing terra cotta flue, structural repair, smoke chamber rebuild. The right application is driven by where the material sits in the assembly. A material that performs beautifully on an interior surround can fail aggressively on a chimney crown, and the reverse is also true. The DFW climate adds a layer that most national specification guides do not account for: the Blackland Prairie clay subsoil swells roughly 30% with water content, which puts cyclical mechanical stress on chimney foundations, and we run 25-35 freeze-thaw cycles per year with a stack of 5-8 hail events on top.
When we evaluate Cast-in-Place Liner for a specific project, the questions we work through are the assembly position (interior surround vs exterior veneer vs crown), the substrate (firebox brick vs framed wall vs masonry chimney chase), the mortar or adhesive system, the load path, and the design intent. The notes below cover the most common applications, and the selection logic our team uses to decide whether Cast-in-Place Liner is the right specification for the work at hand.
Cost Ranges in DFW (2026)
Material-only ranges and typical installed pricing for Cast-in-Place Liner in DFW: $3,800-$-+ typical residential install. Our pricing on Cast-in-Place Liner is bundled with the broader chimney scope and quoted as a fixed price after the on-site assessment. Lifetime-warranty work carries a moderate premium over commodity pricing because of the QA process — bond testing, photo documentation, longer cure windows — but the warranty math favors the homeowner over a 20-year horizon. We document the pricing line by line in the proposal so the homeowner sees exactly what the Cast-in-Place Liner component costs.
Pros and Cons for DFW Climate
Pros: Restores damaged flues without demo, structural reinforcement, smooth draft surface, UL 1777 listed. Cons: Higher cost than stainless reline, longer cure window, requires specialized equipment.DFW-specific note: the Blackland Prairie clay-soil cycle and the 25-35 freeze-thaw events per year are the two environmental factors that most distinguish DFW from coastal or arid Southwest markets. The June 2025 hail season alone produced an estimated $7-10 billion in insured losses across the Metroplex, and chimney crowns and caps were among the most-damaged building components. Specifying Cast-in-Place Liner with these conditions in mind is the difference between a 50-year service life and a 15-year repair cycle. Our specification process always accounts for the seasonal calendar and the underlying soil and climate dynamics.
How PCE Specifies and Installs Cast-in-Place Liner
Our standard practice on Cast-in-Place Liner is to verify the substrate and load path before any material is ordered, pull samples for owner approval before fabrication, and document every step of the install with photographs that become part of the project file. For warranty applications, the documentation file is the audit trail — and it is also the record that lets a future designer or chimney professional understand what was done and why. We adhere to NFPA 211, IRC R1003, and ASTM C270 / C199 / C315 as applicable to the assembly we are building. Where Cast-in-Place Liner is part of a firebox or smoke chamber, we follow refractory specifications without exception. Where it is exterior masonry, we use Type S mortar at crowns and Type N at vertical veneer joints unless the project specification dictates otherwise.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Cast-in-Place Liner carry the lifetime warranty?Yes. Every Cast-in-Place Liner application we install carries our documented lifetime warranty against material failure and workmanship defect. The warranty is transferable to subsequent homeowners and is filed against the property address, not the original purchaser. Documentation is kept on file indefinitely.
What is the bond test you mention on every batch?For mortared applications, we pull a 2-inch coupon from each batch of mortar and pull-test it after a 24-hour cure to verify the bond strength meets ASTM C270. For adhesive systems, we shear-test a sample panel before laying the field. Records are kept on file with the warranty paperwork. The bond test is the QA step that lets us back the lifetime warranty on every install.
Is your team CSIA certified for Cast-in-Place Liner work?Our chimney masonry leads carry CSIA, NCSG, and F.I.R.E. credentials. For Cast-in-Place Liner specifically, our masons train under the Cast Stone Institute (CSI) and Texas Limestone Association continuing-education programs. Certifications are renewed annually and posted at our shop.
How does Cast-in-Place Liner handle DFW freeze-thaw cycling?We see 25-35 freeze-thaw cycles per year in North Dallas, with the chimney crown seeing roughly double. Cast-in-Place Liner performs well when bedded in the right mortar and detailed with proper drip edge geometry. The failure mode we engineer against is water entry at the mortar joint, not the material itself. The lifetime warranty covers both.
Related Materials
- [Lueders Limestone](https://primechimneyexperts.com/materials/lueders-limestone/)
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- [Austin Stone](https://primechimneyexperts.com/materials/austin-stone/)
- [Texas Ledgestone](https://primechimneyexperts.com/materials/texas-ledgestone/)
- [Soapstone](https://primechimneyexperts.com/materials/soapstone/)
Get a Specification Quote
Book your chimney inspection for a Cast-in-Place Liner project — call ☎ 682-226-6257 or visit https://primechimneyexperts.com/contact/. We respond to inquiries within one business day.
Our Sister Companies — Specialists in Related Services
Texas Service Experts is part of a network of CSIA-certified chimney specialists. Depending on your specific need:
- Texas Chimney Experts — chimney repair/masonry
