Hi All,
A quick intro - I've been lurking here a while, and have been inspired by the quality of work I've seen here. Thank you everyone for sharing - I've learnt a lot from this forum. I originally wanted to build a Scott type oven, and then swung completely the other way (once I found out how much the firebrick would cost me!) and planned a basic mud oven as per the Kiko Denzer book. And then I found this site...
I've been really impressed with the geodesic designs I've seen on the forum, and a comment by edschmidt on dmun's geodesic build thread set me thinking....
I'm seriously considering doing this - building a mould and using clay to produce the triangles for a geodesic oven. I don't have a kiln though...
My question - although to me this seems like a great idea, will it work? Will the earthenware clay stand the thermal shock of the fire? Although I don't have a kiln, surely I could build a rough & ready effort out of old bricks in the garden just to fire the triangles? Could I even fire them in situ - i.e. assemble them after drying, then fire them by having a big fire in the dome? Or would the shrinkage make the whole lot collapse? Please - if you can shoot this down before I waste time on it, I'd be very grateful!
Thank you all for everything you've shared so far, and for the inspiration.
Carl
A quick intro - I've been lurking here a while, and have been inspired by the quality of work I've seen here. Thank you everyone for sharing - I've learnt a lot from this forum. I originally wanted to build a Scott type oven, and then swung completely the other way (once I found out how much the firebrick would cost me!) and planned a basic mud oven as per the Kiko Denzer book. And then I found this site...
I've been really impressed with the geodesic designs I've seen on the forum, and a comment by edschmidt on dmun's geodesic build thread set me thinking....
You know I do have a kiln, I could fill my molds with earthware clay which is fired to cone 8-10 2000-2300 deg. and has a high shock resistance. It obviously can tolerate high temps, and costs approx. 34 cents per pound. The triangles would easily fit into the kiln and the density is comparable with firebrick. Can you see any downsides?
My question - although to me this seems like a great idea, will it work? Will the earthenware clay stand the thermal shock of the fire? Although I don't have a kiln, surely I could build a rough & ready effort out of old bricks in the garden just to fire the triangles? Could I even fire them in situ - i.e. assemble them after drying, then fire them by having a big fire in the dome? Or would the shrinkage make the whole lot collapse? Please - if you can shoot this down before I waste time on it, I'd be very grateful!
Thank you all for everything you've shared so far, and for the inspiration.
Carl
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