I am a newbie to the forum and I'm about to start building a small 34inch dome wood fired oven.
I've built the base for the oven (railway sleepers and concrete blocks)
I have managed to get 141 firebricks with 40% alumina content from ebay
Unfortunately the bricks are thinner than the bricks everyone else seems to use (25 mm 230x114 mm) and I only have 141 bricks - not enough to build the dome and base. I was thinking of buying cheaper non refractory bricks to save on costs and to mix these with the higher quality firebricks.
is this a bad idea ?
Would appreciate advice on
1) can I use ordinary bricks with refractory bricks for the dome- or will they expand differently in heat and lead to problems?
2) if I do this - should I use the firebricks on bottom rows of the dome or at the top of the dome?
3) any advice of which type ordinary brick would be better e.g are the harder engineering ones better?
4) is 25mm firebrick (set in concrete/sand/refractory mortar) thick enough for floor of oven?
Thank you for help and advice and all this amazing content on this forum.
I've built the base for the oven (railway sleepers and concrete blocks)
I have managed to get 141 firebricks with 40% alumina content from ebay
Unfortunately the bricks are thinner than the bricks everyone else seems to use (25 mm 230x114 mm) and I only have 141 bricks - not enough to build the dome and base. I was thinking of buying cheaper non refractory bricks to save on costs and to mix these with the higher quality firebricks.
is this a bad idea ?
Would appreciate advice on
1) can I use ordinary bricks with refractory bricks for the dome- or will they expand differently in heat and lead to problems?
2) if I do this - should I use the firebricks on bottom rows of the dome or at the top of the dome?
3) any advice of which type ordinary brick would be better e.g are the harder engineering ones better?
4) is 25mm firebrick (set in concrete/sand/refractory mortar) thick enough for floor of oven?
Thank you for help and advice and all this amazing content on this forum.
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