I have a heat break in the floor between my fire brick and the polished concrete. But, I went about it a little differently. I did the concrete pour in two stages. The first stage brings the concrete up to the level of the floor brick. That left 2" for a polished concrete oven entry landing. I have a face brick arch in front of the outer arch. I cut and mortared in a 2 fire brick threshold. (They are the only floor brick in my oven that are set in mortar) The heat brake is on the oven side of that threshold. Those few brick complete the seal of the under floor insulation from the elements. I used flat ceramic fiber tape and allowed the top to fill in with ash. The polished concrete butts up to that firebrick threshold.
As for as heat transfer is concerned, I dont know if a heat break is even necessary here. But, by doing the concrete in a two part pour and mortaring in a threshold, I did not have to seal the joint between the two. (Actually, I like the idea of wind driven water being allowed to drain through that joint, and away from my oven floor) I also use my oven entry for for the tuscan grill and for dirty steaks. I've had no problem with the polished concrete .
PS: Here is a Picasa link to it. It was all designed to work with a storm door.
As for as heat transfer is concerned, I dont know if a heat break is even necessary here. But, by doing the concrete in a two part pour and mortaring in a threshold, I did not have to seal the joint between the two. (Actually, I like the idea of wind driven water being allowed to drain through that joint, and away from my oven floor) I also use my oven entry for for the tuscan grill and for dirty steaks. I've had no problem with the polished concrete .
PS: Here is a Picasa link to it. It was all designed to work with a storm door.
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