Hey I'm Andrew T from Rotorua, New Zealand.
I've become obsessed with wood fired ovens.
My wife bought me a clay pizza oven not long before Christmas. After reading this and other forums I have modified it so it holds its heat longer.
My plan is now to build my own version 2 oven from scratch. Thinking about using the homebrew mix over a sand dome.
Lots of the materials I would like to use are hard to get in New Zealand (refractory cement, stainless needles, fire bricks, etc).
I've seen the guy on youtube who made an oven using a pumice / portland cement mix so thinking maybe a layer of that over the homebrew and then ceramic blanket: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0FzuScb28gs
I've seen it written on here in many posts that the homebrew works as a castable but might cause problems after 5 years. Wondering where this has come from and if anyone has an older homebrew castable that has had a long service? I suppose it depends on how much use it gets and other factors (e.g. is it a cold climate, does it stay completely dry).
I've become obsessed with wood fired ovens.
My wife bought me a clay pizza oven not long before Christmas. After reading this and other forums I have modified it so it holds its heat longer.
My plan is now to build my own version 2 oven from scratch. Thinking about using the homebrew mix over a sand dome.
Lots of the materials I would like to use are hard to get in New Zealand (refractory cement, stainless needles, fire bricks, etc).
I've seen the guy on youtube who made an oven using a pumice / portland cement mix so thinking maybe a layer of that over the homebrew and then ceramic blanket: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0FzuScb28gs
I've seen it written on here in many posts that the homebrew works as a castable but might cause problems after 5 years. Wondering where this has come from and if anyone has an older homebrew castable that has had a long service? I suppose it depends on how much use it gets and other factors (e.g. is it a cold climate, does it stay completely dry).
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