Howdy folks,
A friend of mine (a much better mason than I) who built an oven several years ago told me that, when he built his oven using half cut bricks, he dry stacked most of the dome using an inner form and shims on the outer gaps and then mortared the bricks afterwords. He then pulled the shims, did a bit of touch-up and was done. Only on the top couple of courses (that had custom cuts) did he mortar "as he went".
My plan was to mortar each course as I went. All my brick experience is with constant thickness gaps where this is the only way I know. But with a large outer gap for the half-cut bricks, this is another alternative.
His comment was that he felt that he could keep the inside of the dome a lot cleaner (less mortar squeezing through) and since he was using a form (and couldn't clean as easily as he went) this was important.
I would appreciate any and all feedback.
Good Roads
Harpist
A friend of mine (a much better mason than I) who built an oven several years ago told me that, when he built his oven using half cut bricks, he dry stacked most of the dome using an inner form and shims on the outer gaps and then mortared the bricks afterwords. He then pulled the shims, did a bit of touch-up and was done. Only on the top couple of courses (that had custom cuts) did he mortar "as he went".
My plan was to mortar each course as I went. All my brick experience is with constant thickness gaps where this is the only way I know. But with a large outer gap for the half-cut bricks, this is another alternative.
His comment was that he felt that he could keep the inside of the dome a lot cleaner (less mortar squeezing through) and since he was using a form (and couldn't clean as easily as he went) this was important.
I would appreciate any and all feedback.
Good Roads
Harpist
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