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42" Pompeii at the Concrete Casa

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  • ThisOldGarageNJ
    replied
    Re: 42" Pompeii at the Concrete Casa

    Hi Mich,
    My only concern, Your landing/tunnel may be too deep.. Suggestion ... Take a broom stick and pretend its a pizza peel, just make sure you can access all areas of your oven easily from thru the door. If you can , you should be fine. My landing/tunnel is only one brick deep.. I attached some pics from when I was building hoping they would explain it better

    Cheers
    mark
    Last edited by ThisOldGarageNJ; 08-16-2010, 05:53 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • michaewa
    replied
    Re: 42" Pompeii at the Concrete Casa

    Thanks to all for your input both in this thread as well as the rich archives. I've spent most of the day a bit paralyzed by all the options and questions but starting to get a better handle on the steps ahead.

    One thing that I'm not completely clear on is the landing - mainly where most of you are measuring the beginning and end of the landing - e.g. interior wall of the oven, exterior wall extended, or some other point.

    Perhaps the attached image will make it clear - this is what I'm thinking, anyway. Basically the landing will be two full bricks deep (18") measured from the inner wall of the oven, or 1.5 bricks deep (13.5") measured from where the extention of the exterior wall will be. I've got it spaced so the door opening will be 20" wide at the bottom, and flared out to 25" measuring from the inside of the landing bricks. If you can't read the tape, it measures about 17" from where the inner wall of the oven would be to the edge of the board.

    The red lines on the brick are where I would notch the bricks to give myself a 1" reveal. If you extend that red line and assume that footprint is the actual first course of the vent, it would mean a half brick width (i.e. 1.25") which is probably a bit thin. In actuality I would probably go with a full brick from the outer wall on out, so that the red line extended would line up with the inside surface of the brick closest to the oven opening.

    This 'feels' about right to me, but I want to make sure I'm not cutting things too close for my vent, etc. It also works well with the insulation board and will serve to minimize the cuts I need to make.

    Any feedback or suggestions? I feel like I'm completely over analyzing this...

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  • ThisOldGarageNJ
    replied
    Re: 42" Pompeii at the Concrete Casa

    maybe 80% of the area of the actual oven floor
    my only concern here is that you would create hot areas on the other 20% of the oven floor "maybe" giving you an uneven heating in the oven.....
    or maybe even just sand.
    sand is not a good insulator....vermicrete would be much better

    I thought I could cut a handful of bricks into shims,
    dont see any reason why you couldnt do this if you wanted to... Especially if you have cut pieces left over..

    Cheers
    Mark

    Leave a comment:


  • michaewa
    replied
    Re: 42" Pompeii at the Concrete Casa

    I'm generating a lot of questions as I begin to lay the insulation down...

    I got four sheets of insulation board to be on the safe side. That leaves me with almost enough to do a double layer, i.e. 4" of insulation below the firebricks. My question is regarding thermal engineering...assuming I did two layers would it be worthwhile to have the first layer of insulation cover maybe 80% of the area of the actual oven floor (say under the center of the oven), then have the 2nd layer (directly below the oven floor) be fully covered? I guess the alternative would be to piece the extra insulation board together in a skirt around the edge of the oven. I don't know if that extra 20% would cause enough thermal leaking to make it not worthwhile. I would fill in the 20% that I couldn't do with insulation with concrete blocks cut to 2" or maybe even just sand.

    Secondly, any reason not to do brick shims on the outside of the dome rather than filling in the largish joints with mortar? I thought I could cut a handful of bricks into shims, put a little mortar top and bottom, and put them in the joint. I'm definitely not a mason, so that may be more trouble than it is worth.

    Finally, I replied to the original poster about the Essential Tool but didn't get any response. I thought I'd check to see if there are any of those still floating around out there that I could woo away from someone temporarily in exchange for shipping costs, lavish praise, and maybe even some homebrew rather than building my own.

    Cheers!

    Leave a comment:


  • ThisOldGarageNJ
    replied
    Re: 42" Pompeii at the Concrete Casa

    rather than underneath
    I put my soldier course on the floor... No problems and the oven works great... I think it is a matter of preference... I also did it to save cutting

    Cheers
    Mark

    Leave a comment:


  • michaewa
    replied
    Re: 42" Pompeii at the Concrete Casa

    Thanks dmun for the confirmation. I've spent the last few minutes looking back at pictures and have noticed a lot of people building the floor inside of the soldier course rather than underneath it (so the walls sit on top of the floor).

    I'm going to assume this is a matter of personal preference (and as you said a function of how you are going to finish the outside) and will not materially affect performance. Since I will be enclosing the whole thing I'm not going to be bothered by the bits hanging out - insulation board, floor brick edges, etc. Please let me know if I'm way off there...

    Cheers!

    Leave a comment:


  • dmun
    replied
    Re: 42" Pompeii at the Concrete Casa

    there is no need to cut the bricks where they hang out from under where the dome will be is there? It isn't entirely clear from the photos.
    No need at all. I only trimmed bricks where I could get a clear half brick to use somewhere else. If you are going igloo, you may want a roughly round shape to conform to your dome, but otherwise, just build the dome on the floor.

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  • michaewa
    replied
    Re: 42" Pompeii at the Concrete Casa

    I got the firebricks this week, my insulation board should arrive today as well.

    This may be a dumb question, but as you lay out the oven floor, there is no need to cut the bricks where they hang out from under where the dome will be is there? It isn't entirely clear from the photos.

    The only advantage I could see from trimming off the excess would be slightly less thermal mass as you were firing the oven.

    Also, any suggested sizes for the landing for a 42" oven? I'm trying to determine just how far back the center of the dome should be from the front of the slab to be comfortable to use and provide enough working area in front of the oven.

    Thanks!

    Leave a comment:


  • ThisOldGarageNJ
    replied
    Re: 42" Pompeii at the Concrete Casa

    I've been to their website before,, I get nervous when they dont post any kind of pricing as to me that means they will charge you what they think you will pay.... Im curious to hear how you make out

    Good Luck
    Mark

    Leave a comment:


  • michaewa
    replied
    Re: 42" Pompeii at the Concrete Casa

    It was suggested as an alternative by someone I was trading emails with at Armil, I'm doing a little research now to see how it stacks up.

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  • dmun
    replied
    Re: 42" Pompeii at the Concrete Casa

    Durablanket is a new name to me. Seems legitimate. Unifrax urges you to contact a product engineer by phone to determine the best of several products for your application, I'd recommend this.

    Leave a comment:


  • michaewa
    replied
    Re: 42" Pompeii at the Concrete Casa

    Quick materials question as I wait for my slab to cure...Insulfrax vs. Durablanket - are they comparable? Insulfrax seems to be at a much higher price point.

    I've seen a lot of discussion on these but no definitive recommendations.

    Thanks...

    Leave a comment:


  • michaewa
    replied
    Re: 42" Pompeii at the Concrete Casa

    Slab: check. It was terribly anticlimactic, probably the first time I've been totally ready when the concrete truck pulled up. I helped my neighbor with his sidewalk, and had just enough to fill all the cells in the block wall and finish the top.

    It was a great mix, 6.5 bag and I put a pound of glass fiber in it as well, whenever I am not cooking pizza that thing will double as a bomb shelter.

    I feel like I cheated by not having the mixer and oodles of bags of concrete, but I am very glad it happened that way

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  • ThisOldGarageNJ
    replied
    Re: 42" Pompeii at the Concrete Casa

    It appears that I will get lucky with concrete as well, my neighbor is pouring a sidewalk the day after tomorrow, and I'm going to tack on a yard to his order,
    Now that is lucky,,, go out and buy some lottery tickets..

    Nice so far,, looking good

    Mark

    Leave a comment:


  • michaewa
    replied
    Re: 42" Pompeii at the Concrete Casa

    Ok, it sounds like north of 200 is definitely where I need to be with firebricks. Thanks to all for your input.

    I got the forms done and steel placed today, I decided to lay some plastic over the plywood as I invariably spend twice as long trying to pry the forms out as I do finishing the slab.

    It appears that I will get lucky with concrete as well, my neighbor is pouring a sidewalk the day after tomorrow, and I'm going to tack on a yard to his order, which I think will be enough to fill all the cells and pour the slab. I was not looking forward to lugging all those bags of portland around.

    Some additional standard photos:




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