I am about to start my 36" build and i am lucky enough to have tapered bricks that should form my dome easily. I have noticed that most people use the indispensable tool to help form their dome but does this also allow the brick to set for a bit. I am finding it hard to understand why the bricks don't fall as you get higher before you have the chain completed and wedged. I know i can use Styrofoam forms but most do not and i feel it could get in the way. Have been looking at loads of pictures and it seems like the bricks are staying up by magic or really fast drying cement. Nerves before i start?
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Re: Falling bricks?
The way masonry works is thus (simplified to answer your question):
Wet mortar is applied to dry bricks.
The moisture is sucked out of the mortar into the brick.
This facilitates short term adhesion and long term bond strength.
This is why you do not soak your bricks, but in extreme conditions may have to dampen them. It also explains why mortar should not be considered to be concrete. They both contain cement and aggregates, but do not share desired physical properties or application methods.
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Re: Falling bricks?
Originally posted by Tscarborough View Post
This is why you do not soak your bricks, but in extreme conditions may have to dampen them. It also explains why mortar should not be considered to be concrete. They both contain cement and aggregates, but do not share desired physical properties or application methods.
Worked for me...Check out my pictures here:
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If at first you don't succeed... Skydiving isn't for you.
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Re: Falling bricks?
About to start, Dublintom? Good for you and congratulations on beginning you oven. The bricks really do stay put quite easily. On the lower oven rings the bricks are not deifying gravity so they stay put. On the upper rows, you just hold it there for 1-2 minutes, and if you didn't over-soak your bricks (see tscarb's reply above) it sticks, and you can move on. If you are building the oven all by yourself, it helps to have sticks, or pvc pipe, wooden stakes or whatever to hold up a brick while it sets for a few minutes while you move on to the next row.
I feel the work and time of cutting a Styrofoam ball could go into just holding the brick in place for 1 minute or placing a stick to give the brick the 3-5 minute support it needs until it's permanently set. The bricks stick surprisingly well. HOWEVER: it wouldn't be a proper wfo building experience until a few bricks fall just when you turn your back. I have 42" oven and I would say maybe 5 brick fell (near the top) that I had to scrape off the mortar, clean them, and re set them. And this time, hold on to them for a few minutes longer before removed my hand. The arches absolutely need forms (a plywood arch) to keep them from falling unless you cut good wedges with little to no mortar.
good luck on your oven build, Dino"Life is a banquet and most poor sons-of-bitches are starving to death." -Auntie Mame
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Re: Falling bricks?
I was surprised that even toward the top the mortar held the bricks after a half minute or so of holding them in place. I just used the string and knot method and it worked fine. I'm envious of the perfect shape of the ovens that use the indispensable tool, but I suspect the pizza doesn't care that very little about my oven is perfectly round, square, plumb or level.Joe
Member WFOAMBA Wood Fired Oven Amatueur Masons Builders America
My thread: http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/f8/j...oven-8181.html
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Re: Falling bricks?...question re your insulating base
Originally posted by dublintom View PostI am about to start my 36" build and i am lucky enough to have tapered bricks that should form my dome easily. I have noticed that most people use the indispensable tool to help form their dome but does this also allow the brick to set for a bit. ..............
Wondering did you use the same product and how did you get on with the insulating base under the fire hearth.
Would be interested in talking to you over the phone about your experiences to date.
Will worry about the bricks falling later !
Tommy 087-624 2244
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Re: Falling bricks?
Hi LTG
Well done on starting. I wouldn't worry about the base being spongy, give it a week and it will be fine. I used a mixture of medium and coarse vermiculite at 7:1, went away for 3 weeks and it was fine. I laid out the base last Sunday week and i put in the keystone at the top of the dome tonight so I am celebrating. Guess I was lucky with the weather, not having rain for a week. I have loads of pictures but havn't had time to put them up yet. I am actually from your area ie Sallynoggin but am living in Drogheda now. I have a lot of bricks over which are tapered and you are welcome to them. Best of luck with the build.
Tom
Ps only one brick fell!
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Re: Falling bricks?
Tom, congrats! It took me two months what you did in a week Did you use any support for the last 2-3 chains?my own Quest for Fire:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/leckig/
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Re: Falling bricks?
Thanks, its a great feeling to seal the dome. The fact that i had tapered bricks definitely made it easier. I used sticks for the 3rd last chain and then put in a platform with sand for the last chain and keystones. Just hope it doesn't crack too much now when fired up but i will take my time with that.
Tom
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Re: Falling bricks?
that is pretty much what I did! I only have two small cracks in the arch, I have not seen anything else yet. Homebrew mortar.my own Quest for Fire:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/leckig/
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Re: Falling bricks?
i used a swiss ball,you no the kind that gyms have for exercise,pumped it up to the right height and had my valve at the front of the oven so i could let the ball down again,then i packed around the ball with wet towels and other large blankets and covered in wet sand and shaped it to the shape i wanted,i then let it settle for a while and compacted the sand a little so it wouldnt move, then i covered in glad wrap or thin plastic like they use for wrapping goods,then finished my dome,bricks didnt move and i could do the whole job in one day,
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