Hello. This is my first post. After browsing some, I did not see a post like this, so here goes.
I built a 42" ID oven following the design offered by FB. A contractor friend who built one for himself about 8 years earlier using the FB design helped me. We completed the project without problem during the Fall of 2020. About 3 months after construction, I noticed the bricks beginning to sag a bit in the center of the oven floor. Now, about 9 months after construction, the middle of the oven floor has sagged about an inch and one brick has dropped well below the others. This all suggests to me that there is a void under the cement board and that the board has broken. But we filled the circle under the cement board up to the top with vermiculite. Also, the cement board was the same used on my friend's oven and his is fine after about 8 years (1/2 inch I think). I will attach some pictures.
I am wondering what to do. One option might be to fill the spot where the brick dropped with a new brick (possibly using a split brick since the brick dropped about half the thickness), grind the surface smooth and hope for the best since the floor dip doesn't really interfere with cooking. If the problem gets worse, or if this forum gives me the necessary courage, I could try something more aggressive (pull floor bricks and rebuild somehow, or float the existing floor with high-temp mortar and lay in a thin floor of soapstone, or something else). What do you all think? One concern I have is confined space entry. Should I blow air in while I work in there?
Thank you.
Rob
I built a 42" ID oven following the design offered by FB. A contractor friend who built one for himself about 8 years earlier using the FB design helped me. We completed the project without problem during the Fall of 2020. About 3 months after construction, I noticed the bricks beginning to sag a bit in the center of the oven floor. Now, about 9 months after construction, the middle of the oven floor has sagged about an inch and one brick has dropped well below the others. This all suggests to me that there is a void under the cement board and that the board has broken. But we filled the circle under the cement board up to the top with vermiculite. Also, the cement board was the same used on my friend's oven and his is fine after about 8 years (1/2 inch I think). I will attach some pictures.
I am wondering what to do. One option might be to fill the spot where the brick dropped with a new brick (possibly using a split brick since the brick dropped about half the thickness), grind the surface smooth and hope for the best since the floor dip doesn't really interfere with cooking. If the problem gets worse, or if this forum gives me the necessary courage, I could try something more aggressive (pull floor bricks and rebuild somehow, or float the existing floor with high-temp mortar and lay in a thin floor of soapstone, or something else). What do you all think? One concern I have is confined space entry. Should I blow air in while I work in there?
Thank you.
Rob
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