Hello there!
Still wading thru the info from the forno bravo site and making notes of key ingredients. Also checking out the (few?) Australian suppliers of refractory stuff.
One of these has a materials list for a circular dome pizza oven measuring 100 cm in diameter and quotes $A3.50 ea. for the medium-duty bricks (there are no low-duty bricks listed).
My question: the list states the dome will need 67 of their arch 75/63 bricks and 33 of their arch 75/57 bricks, plus 25 base bricks - what do these fractions refer to? (I guess I'll also ask the company when they're open again tomorrow...) Perhaps they make the bricks the right shape for building a cupola? This would be just to beaut for words, saving all the cutting and splitting of bricks (not something I'd look forward to at just over 70!)
Another question to the wise:
For a round oven, why not make the hearth (and by extension the slab) round also? I'm thinking of using the stiff clay soil on our property to "form up" for the base concrete by just digging a circle etc.
Then I would build blockwork walls as described for the Pompeii model - except mine would radiate in quadrants from the centre! This will leave me with four open spaces to put the cut timber in... I may even leave the walls short at the centre, i.e. unconnected, so that the little poisonous black snakes (one just killed a young hen who thought she'd found a nice big worm!) can slither away in any direction when disturbed...
Then the round hearth slab would be cast on top of the four radial block walls. I guess the radial walls would be even better at holding up the hearth because than the rectangular stand as there's more support where the weight is...
I'm certain to have more questions once I really get going... can't wait to start! And all this because my wife's fancy s/s electric oven that I'd been keeping going for the past 13 years has finally conked out and we have to BUY 'bread' instead of baking our own sourdough loaves...
Cheers,
Carioca
Still wading thru the info from the forno bravo site and making notes of key ingredients. Also checking out the (few?) Australian suppliers of refractory stuff.
One of these has a materials list for a circular dome pizza oven measuring 100 cm in diameter and quotes $A3.50 ea. for the medium-duty bricks (there are no low-duty bricks listed).
My question: the list states the dome will need 67 of their arch 75/63 bricks and 33 of their arch 75/57 bricks, plus 25 base bricks - what do these fractions refer to? (I guess I'll also ask the company when they're open again tomorrow...) Perhaps they make the bricks the right shape for building a cupola? This would be just to beaut for words, saving all the cutting and splitting of bricks (not something I'd look forward to at just over 70!)
Another question to the wise:
For a round oven, why not make the hearth (and by extension the slab) round also? I'm thinking of using the stiff clay soil on our property to "form up" for the base concrete by just digging a circle etc.
Then I would build blockwork walls as described for the Pompeii model - except mine would radiate in quadrants from the centre! This will leave me with four open spaces to put the cut timber in... I may even leave the walls short at the centre, i.e. unconnected, so that the little poisonous black snakes (one just killed a young hen who thought she'd found a nice big worm!) can slither away in any direction when disturbed...
Then the round hearth slab would be cast on top of the four radial block walls. I guess the radial walls would be even better at holding up the hearth because than the rectangular stand as there's more support where the weight is...
I'm certain to have more questions once I really get going... can't wait to start! And all this because my wife's fancy s/s electric oven that I'd been keeping going for the past 13 years has finally conked out and we have to BUY 'bread' instead of baking our own sourdough loaves...
Cheers,
Carioca
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