Hi Everyone,
I've been wanting to build a pizza oven for a while now, and finally managed to get some time off work so I figured I'd better go for it when I have the time.
Spent a month lurking on the forum and soaking up all the great info on here before I decided I was ready to start.
Also note that I am not a mason and have never done any masonry related, so please don't be too hard on me or my techniques!
The two main conditions of the build were
a. It has to be cheap
b. It has to be portable so I can take it with me when I move (I'm in a rental house)
The answer to A. came in the form of a CL ad advertising free refractory bricks from a kiln that had been disassembled in Surrey. I headed out and came back with a couple hundred bricks (not many full) that I'm pretty sure are a high duty firebrick. (they are tough as heck to cut)
Got the bricks home and started cutting, one of the threads I read said that the cuts are pretty much for the first 5 courses so I just went for it, dry stacking them as I went.
Answer to B. came in the form of a 60 day notice as our property is being redeveloped. The original plan was to build the oven on a wooden stand that would make it possible to move to a new location with a trailer. As my time frame had just been significantly reduced, I figured why not just build it ON the trailer and save myself a step. I found a trailer for 100 bucks that day and got to it right away.
1st photo shows some of the bricks (some full, some half, many bits)
2nd photo shows dry stack "mock up"
3rd shows trailer
I've been wanting to build a pizza oven for a while now, and finally managed to get some time off work so I figured I'd better go for it when I have the time.
Spent a month lurking on the forum and soaking up all the great info on here before I decided I was ready to start.
Also note that I am not a mason and have never done any masonry related, so please don't be too hard on me or my techniques!
The two main conditions of the build were
a. It has to be cheap
b. It has to be portable so I can take it with me when I move (I'm in a rental house)
The answer to A. came in the form of a CL ad advertising free refractory bricks from a kiln that had been disassembled in Surrey. I headed out and came back with a couple hundred bricks (not many full) that I'm pretty sure are a high duty firebrick. (they are tough as heck to cut)
Got the bricks home and started cutting, one of the threads I read said that the cuts are pretty much for the first 5 courses so I just went for it, dry stacking them as I went.
Answer to B. came in the form of a 60 day notice as our property is being redeveloped. The original plan was to build the oven on a wooden stand that would make it possible to move to a new location with a trailer. As my time frame had just been significantly reduced, I figured why not just build it ON the trailer and save myself a step. I found a trailer for 100 bucks that day and got to it right away.
1st photo shows some of the bricks (some full, some half, many bits)
2nd photo shows dry stack "mock up"
3rd shows trailer
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