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Oh, the Humanity!!

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  • Oh, the Humanity!!

    My apologies for being missing for a while (adopted 4th child, lost job, been busy), but I need to share what happened to my beautiful pizza oven:

    IT COLLAPSED! It has been wet this year in Utah, but I kept it covered with a tarp. Still, I think the combination of moisture and freezing temps did their damage.





    She used to look like this:



    I can't be sure exactly what happened until I do a complete post-mortem but my mason went through all the mortar that came with the kit and then I bought at least 3 more 50lb. bags of Sairset. There was a lot of mortar in there. The Sairset never seemed to form a decent bond with the brickwork, either. Anyway, I'll post a "lessons learned" when I figure out what happened.

    Greg
    sigpic
    I'm not dead, yet! I'm feeling better.

  • #2
    Re: Oh, the Humanity!!

    I will help you with a few things.

    First, your entry arch does not have nearly enough mass to buttress it.

    Second, the flue stack has basically no support, see above.

    I am somewhat surprised that the entry failing brought down the whole thing though.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Oh, the Humanity!!

      Let me add, though, that I really like the entry design with the wedge shaped landing.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Oh, the Humanity!!

        So sorry for your loss. Oh, the Humanity!! says it all.

        Congratulations on #4

        You used Sairset. I think I looked at that product and I thought it was for kilns. I remember some property of it that made me go NO not the correct stuff. Perhaps someone else would know more. But I would look at that first.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Oh, the Humanity!!

          Just for general information, the purpose of most mortars, and especially refractory mortars, is to keep the bricks apart, not hold them together. That is to say, the mortar is a chinking material used to fill the gaps, not a glue to hold them together. Firebrick are dry pressed solely to allow them to maintain a very tight dimensional tolerance compared to extruded brick. 3/8" joints are normal for masonry work, but 1/8" is desired for fireplaces.

          Keeping this in mind, almost any material that can withstand high heat is suitable for the oven mortar. Sairset, and similar mortars are not designed for high build use (thick joints). They are designed for very narrow joints. The aggregate used is very small, and that limits the ability of the mortar to dry without cracking.

          For larger joints like those present in hemispherical ovens, a high build mortar is desired. They will have more and larger aggregate, as well as the ability to remain somewhat plastic though the drying cycle. That is the role lime fulfills in the home brew mortar for example.

          Another aspect is the bond strength of the material used as mortar. As a rule, the higher the compressive strength (the "harder" or "richer" the mix), the less bond strength it will have. Proper masonry design always favors the weakest possible mortar that can withstand designed loads. Those loads are very small in relationship to normal concrete construction. Mortar is not concrete.

          Doing things like soaking the highly absorptive firebrick and mixing the mortar somewhat wet for workability and potlife decrease bond strength and should be avoided.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Oh, the Humanity!!

            You know you're absolutely right. I knew that there needed to be buttressing of the edges, especially with an entry arch that low, but somehow, forgot. Still, I noticed that the Sairset flaked off and didn't cure out as hard as I expected it should have.

            While it was cooking the flaired entry was the bomb. People could see in and I had lots of room to support food.

            Of course the support for the stack and the sides was going to be provided by the surrounding structure which would have waterproofed it as well.

            Buttvision is always 20/20.

            Greg
            sigpic
            I'm not dead, yet! I'm feeling better.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Oh, the Humanity!!

              Originally posted by gbohnstedt View Post

              Buttvision is always 20/20.
              Thats got to go in the WFO dictionary somewhere - I'm still laughing. Sorry for the crash...
              Check out my pictures here:
              http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/f8/les-build-4207.html

              If at first you don't succeed... Skydiving isn't for you.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Oh, the Humanity!!

                Originally posted by Tscarborough View Post
                Just for general information, the purpose of most mortars, and especially refractory mortars, is to keep the bricks apart, not hold them together. That is to say, the mortar is a chinking material used to fill the gaps, not a glue to hold them together.
                Now he tells me. That, of course, is completely counter-intuitive to how we typically use the word mortar. So, if my mason was not cutting tapers on the bricks which created a high build in the outside and not so much on the inside, would this have contributed to the "fall of the house of Pizza"? I am posting a picture of the inside of the oven so you can see the mortar joints.







                Greg
                sigpic
                I'm not dead, yet! I'm feeling better.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Oh, the Humanity!!

                  It looks like he did a good job to me. The mortar didn't fail, the structure did.

                  I used a Sairset type mortar on my oven, although the vault was designed to have minimal face joints, and do not anticipate any issues (and spent a couple of days standing on top of it with my considerable bulk plus 20 odd brick and buckets of mortar).

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Oh, the Humanity!!

                    Is this a first? Has an oven (other than the wet clay geodesic at MFA) ever collapsed before?

                    I don't think you can blame the flared entry. I have one and there seems to be no danger of collapse (so far).

                    I think I can safely keep warning builders off of wet premix mortars.
                    My geodesic oven project: part 1, part 2

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Oh, the Humanity!!

                      Defiantly keep warning them off the wet pre-mix. It is not suitable for a Pompeii style oven.

                      It wasn't the design of the entry itself that failed, it was the lack of buttressing for the low arch.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Oh, the Humanity!!

                        Sorry Greg to see and hear here what happened to your oven. I hope this doesn't high jack this post but I have a question on an earlier comment that I may have miss understood....
                        "Doing things like soaking the highly absorptive firebrick and mixing the mortar somewhat wet for workability and potlife decrease bond strength and should be avoided."

                        I am thinking to when I built my first oven I soaked my bricks before cutting and mortaring them in place as I thought this was to help stop the bricks from drying out the mortar too quickly. I am I just reading into the quote here wrongly and the advise is for something else regarding moisture and brick.....Its been 2 years since I have thought about details of the oven build but I am now in the middle of planning another build and just want to make sure I am on the right track..........wayne
                        Step by Step of Oven #2 Build... I have built this one in partnership with a friend for a customer that took a liking to my first oven https://picasaweb.google.com/waynebe...42PompeiiOven#

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Oh, the Humanity!!

                          The technical term is "saturated surface dry". Here is an explanation:

                          Concrete Technology | Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs): Saturated Surface Dry | Portland Cement Association (PCA)

                          The brick should be dampened to some extent depending upon conditions, but never soaked, which would imply saturation.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Oh, the Humanity!!

                            Note that that is an explanation of the term, not it's applicability to our application. For that, read this:

                            Reinforced masonry engineering ... - Google Books

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Oh, the Humanity!!

                              Oh the humanity indeed. Give us hope. Tell us your going to rebuild!
                              My oven build: http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/f8/m...and-13300.html

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