Originally posted by JRPizza
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That said I so far spent very little money even when I bought professional aluminate mortar, CaSi board etc.
I believe that so far I've spent less than 400 USD and will very likely spend less then 500 USD in total:
- bricks (150 pcs, reclaimed) - 80 USD
- CaSi - like 120 USD
- mortar - 80 USD
- base red bricks - basically free (reclaimed)
- insulfrax insulation to cover dome - 10 USD (four large boxes, much of it will left) - I bought it as "leftovers" from big local company which builds large furnaces
- some minor material like 50 USD so far
- hearth concrete - like 70 USD maybe
Things to buy at this point:
- some concrete bagged mix to cover dome insulation (I already have vermiculate which I will add)
- bag of fireclay (part will be used under floor bricks, part will I add to dome enclosing concrete layer)
- bag of silicone (or acrylic) final render (will be bought from neighbor who builds houses for living, some leftovers almost for free)
- fire-resistant rope
Yesterday I was talking to my father-in-law who is professional structural engineer. He does exactly calculations of the structural stuff used in ovens basically - arches, horizontal/vertical forces etc. He did some basic calculations and found out that basic axe-like arch of my dimensions, only standing on bricks in their 12.5 cm side with NO buttressing should carry HUGE chimney/vent constructions without any problems.
Here are some pics from weekend's work. I was little unsure about my dome-arch transition so had to backfill some space with pieces of bricks but I realized how it should look/connect - you either cut arch bricks and create surface on which dome bricks sit, or you cut dome brick to make it sit to arch brick or combine both approaches - which I will partly do to "interlock" those two structures well. I will complete 5th (basically) course intersection likely today. I also started to observe inverted V-shape in dome bricks, so decided to "bevel" their corners a bit with angle grinder to redice the V. Also, I backfilled all big mortar sections with firebrick scraps.
So far so good. My work is far from looking nice and tidy and clean like builds of masters from this forum, but things are going forward nicely. I do not rush anywhere.
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