Theoretical stack-effect draft
API · /chimney-api
Chimney & Flue API
Chimney and flue sizing maths as an API, computed locally and deterministically — the draft and dimension numbers a stove installer, sweep or builder runs so a fire pulls cleanly and safely. The flue-size endpoint gives the minimum flue cross-section for a fireplace opening: at least a tenth of the opening area for a square or rectangular liner, a twelfth for a round one (which draws better) — a 36 × 30 inch opening needs about 108 square inches of rectangular flue, or a 10.7-inch round. The draft endpoint gives the theoretical draft from the stack effect, ΔP ≈ 3465 × height × (1/T_outside − 1/T_flue) with temperatures in kelvin, so a 6-metre chimney with 200 °C flue gas on a freezing day pulls about 32 pascals (0.13 inches of water column) — taller and hotter draws harder. The height endpoint applies the 3-2-10 rule: a chimney must finish at least 3 feet above where it pierces the roof and at least 2 feet above anything within 10 feet, whichever is higher. Everything is computed locally and deterministically, so it is instant and private. Ideal for hearth and stove-installer apps, chimney-sweep and inspection tools, building-design calculators, and DIY-safety sites. Pure local computation — no key, no third-party service, instant. Live, nothing stored. 3 compute endpoints. Educational estimates — verify against your appliance listing and adopted code.
API health
healthy- Uptime
- 100.00%
- Server probes · 24h
- Avg latency
- 80 ms
- Server probes · 24h
- Subscribers
- 3,284
- active
- Total calls
- 76
- last 7 days
Pricing
Pick a tier — billed monthly, cancel anytime.
Free
Free
- 420 calls / month
- 2 requests / second
- Hard cap (429 above quota, no overage)
- 420 calls/month
- 2 req/sec
- Flue size + draft + height
- No credit card
Starter
€5.25 /month
- 11,000 calls / month
- 6 requests / second
- Hard cap (429 above quota, no overage)
- 11,000 calls/month
- 6 req/sec
- Stack-effect draft
- Email support
Pro
€17.20 /month
- 72,000 calls / month
- 15 requests / second
- Hard cap (429 above quota, no overage)
- 72,000 calls/month
- 15 req/sec
- Installer & inspection pipelines
- Priority support
Mega
€51.60 /month
- 245,000 calls / month
- 36 requests / second
- Hard cap (429 above quota, no overage)
- 245,000 calls/month
- 36 req/sec
- Platform scale
- Dedicated SLA
Built by
Related APIs
Other APIs with overlapping tags.
Handrail & Baluster API
Railing and baluster layout maths as an API, computed locally and deterministically — the baluster-count, spacing and post numbers a deck builder, fabricator or balustrade designer sets a guardrail out with. The baluster-count endpoint gives the smallest number of balusters that keeps every gap within the safety limit: between two posts n balusters leave n+1 gaps, so the count = ceil((rail length − max gap) ÷ (baluster width + max gap)). The usual guardrail limit is a 100 mm (4-inch) sphere — a child-safety rule — so a 2000 mm rail with 40 mm balusters needs 14 of them at even 96 mm gaps; round up, because one fewer opens the gaps past the limit. The layout endpoint sets out a known count evenly: the gap = (rail length − total baluster width) ÷ (count + 1), the centre-to-centre pitch = baluster width + gap, and the first baluster's centre sits one gap plus half a baluster from the post face, so you mark the first centre and step off the pitch with the last gap landing equal to the first. The post-count endpoint sizes the frame: a run needs one more post than spans, spans = ceil(run ÷ max post spacing), posts = spans + 1, even spacing = run ÷ spans — a 6 m run at a 1.8 m max takes 4 spans and 5 posts at a tidy 1.5 m. Everything is computed locally and deterministically, so it is instant and private. Ideal for deck and balustrade design tools, fabrication and estimating apps, and building calculators. Pure local computation — no key, no third-party service, instant. Uses the common 100 mm infill rule — confirm your local code. 3 compute endpoints. For stair rise and run use a stair API; for fence pickets a fence API.
api.oanor.com/handrail-api
Arch Geometry API
Circular-segment arch geometry as an API, computed locally and deterministically — the radius, arc-length and set-out numbers a mason, joiner, stonemason or CAD user lays a segmental arch out with. A segmental arch is an arc of a circle struck through the two springings and the crown: the from-span-rise endpoint takes the span and the rise (the height of the crown above the springing line) and returns the radius = (span²/4 + rise²) ÷ (2·rise), the central angle it subtends, the arc length along the curve, and the segment area of the void below it — flatter arches with a small rise have surprisingly huge radii. The from-radius-angle endpoint inverts it, returning the chord (span), the rise (sagitta), the arc length and the area from a known radius and central angle, the way a curve struck with a trammel or a router on a pivot is described. The setout-ordinates endpoint gives the practical numbers to mark a template: the rise of the arc above a straight base line at equally spaced stations across the span (y = √(R² − x²) − (R − rise)), so you can plot the heights, connect them and cut a plywood former or bend a batten without a giant compass — the ends come out zero at the springings and the middle equals the rise at the crown. Everything is computed locally and deterministically, so it is instant and private. Ideal for masonry and joinery layout tools, stair and window-head design, and CAD and woodworking calculators. Pure local computation — no key, no third-party service, instant. Segmental (up to a semicircle) arcs. 3 compute endpoints. For road curves use a horizontal- or vertical-curve API; for plain shape areas a geometry API.
api.oanor.com/arch-api
Mobile Crane Lift API
Mobile-crane lift-planning maths as an API, computed locally and deterministically — the load-moment, tipping-capacity and outrigger-pad numbers a crane operator, lift planner or rigging engineer checks a pick with. The load-moment endpoint gives the load × its working radius (the horizontal distance from the slew centre to the hook), the single figure a crane's rated-capacity limiter watches: a 5-tonne load at 8 m is a 40 tonne-metre moment, the same as 10 tonnes at 4 m, which is why chart capacity falls steeply as the boom luffs out — moment, not weight, tips the crane. The capacity endpoint gives a simplified tipping balance about the fulcrum: the load that just tips = counterweight × its radius ÷ the load radius, and the rated safe load is a stability fraction of that (~75 % on outriggers, ~66 % on crawlers per the standards) — a teaching/sanity figure that ignores the boom and superstructure, never a substitute for the load chart. The outrigger-pad endpoint sizes the float: required pad area = the outrigger leg load ÷ the soil's allowable bearing pressure (and the side of a square mat), since overloading weak ground is a leading cause of overturns — a 30-tonne leg on 200 kPa wants about a 1.2 m square mat. Everything is computed locally and deterministically, so it is instant and private. Ideal for lift-planning and rigging tools, construction and crane-operations apps, and site-safety utilities. Pure local computation — no key, no third-party service, instant. Simplified — always use the manufacturer load chart. 3 compute endpoints. For sling and WLL loads use a rigging API.
api.oanor.com/crane-api
Ladder Safety API
Ladder-safety maths as an API, computed locally and deterministically — the angle, reach and load numbers that keep a ladder from sliding out or buckling. The angle endpoint applies the 4:1 rule: the base goes out one foot for every four feet of working length, which lands the ladder at about 75.5° — a 24-foot ladder sits 6 feet from the wall and reaches roughly 23 feet up, steep enough not to tip back and shallow enough not to slide. The extension endpoint gives the usable length and reach of a two-section extension ladder, which loses the overlap the sections share (3 feet up to 36, 4 to 48, 5 beyond), and the working height at the safe angle — remembering the ladder must extend 3 feet above a roof edge you step onto. The duty-rating endpoint turns a total load — your weight plus tools and materials, not just bodyweight — into the right duty class, from Type III household (200 lb) through I industrial (250) to IAA professional (375). Everything is computed locally and deterministically, so it is instant and private. Ideal for construction-safety and trades apps, jobsite and rental tools, OSHA training aids, and home-improvement sites. Pure local computation — no key, no third-party service, instant. Live, nothing stored. 3 compute endpoints. Educational — always follow the manufacturer's labels and OSHA/ANSI rules.
api.oanor.com/ladder-api
Frequently asked questions
Quick answers about pricing, quotas, and integration.
How do I get an API key for Chimney & Flue API?
What's the rate limit for Chimney & Flue API?
How much does Chimney & Flue API cost?
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Pick an endpoint from the list on the left to see its details and try it.
Code snippets
Sign up to get an API key, then call any path under your slug.
curl https://api.oanor.com/chimney-api/SOME_PATH \
-H "x-oanor-key: oanor_test_..."
const res = await fetch("https://api.oanor.com/chimney-api/SOME_PATH", {
headers: { "x-oanor-key": "oanor_test_..." }
});
const data = await res.json();
$ch = curl_init("https://api.oanor.com/chimney-api/SOME_PATH");
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_RETURNTRANSFER, true);
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_HTTPHEADER, ["x-oanor-key: oanor_test_..."]);
$response = curl_exec($ch);
import requests
r = requests.get(
"https://api.oanor.com/chimney-api/SOME_PATH",
headers={"x-oanor-key": "oanor_test_..."},
)
print(r.json())
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