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Oven floor design: thickness & insulation

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  • dbhansen
    replied
    Re: Oven floor design: thickness & insulation

    Originally posted by james View Post
    What do you think? Does the analogy work for you?
    Yes, James, that's a great analogy. Thanks. I believe I read some of that in another of your posts a while back but had forgotten about it. I hope to pay you back by purchasing my insulation board from you later in the year (among other things)!

    Continuing the analogy ... do you think 4" of insulation board would help that sponge hold much more water than 2"? Or are we only talking about a few drops?
    Last edited by dbhansen; 04-01-2008, 12:46 PM.

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  • Xabia Jim
    replied
    Re: Oven floor design: thickness & insulation

    I believe that that is a lesson I've learned here at FB. Too much mass can just wick away your heat.....Thinner dome is ok with insulation and so is a single brick hearth with insulation board under it.....especially for the home oven.

    and if you have space and money, double the board under and the blanket over.

    Leave a comment:


  • james
    replied
    Re: Oven floor design: thickness & insulation

    I was talking with Dave in DC the other day, and I think we came across of good way of describing just how much heat a 2 1/2"-3" oven floor and dome can hold. Think of your oven as a sponge, soaking up water from a spray bottle. You keep straying the sponge on one side, and that side gets wet, but the other side of the sponge is bone dry. If you spray and wait, spray and wait, at some point, the whole sponge will get wet -- or fully saturated.

    That is basically what is happening with our wood-fired ovens. You put a lot of heat into the inner face with a large fire, but outer edge of the floor and dome are still cold until the oven absorbs more heat. Just think how much fire and heat it would take to fully saturate a 2 1/2"-3" oven to where it was 800?F all the way to the outer edge. And think about how much heat would be stored for baking.

    My point is that there are no residential cooking requirements that cannot be addressed with standard a FB oven (pre-made or Pompeii). If you need more heat, you can fire the oven longer, and it will store more heat.

    Back to my sponge analogy. If you spray a thicker sponge with the same amount of water, that water will just be wicked to the outer edge of the sponge, so that none of the sponge will be wet -- it will all be damp (or in oven terms, warm, not hot).

    The fatter sponge, or thicker oven, cannot retain water (heat) that you have not put in.

    What do you think? Does the analogy work for you?

    I know I have said this before, but I think the idea that thicker is better can really get folks off on the wrong foot.

    James
    Last edited by james; 04-01-2008, 11:01 AM.

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  • Frances
    replied
    Re: Oven floor design: thickness & insulation

    Originally posted by dmun View Post
    On the other hand, a herring bone floor of bricks laid on their edge would look REALLY cool...
    I'm sooo glad I didn't read that one before building my oven...

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  • dmun
    replied
    Re: Oven floor design: thickness & insulation

    2 inches of cal-sil board and flat 2.25 inch fire bricks are fine for domestic ovens. There should be no problems doing two sequential batches of bread, particularly if you plan the bake so that the loaves that like hotter temperatures go first. Keep this in perspective: draw a 42 inch circle on a piece of plywood, or lay down a string on the rug that size, and put a loaf of bread there. That's a big oven for domestic use.

    What do I find? It takes a long time for my oven to cool off to bread baking temps, and I've burned loaves of bread because of impatience. More mass would keep me cooling my heels even longer.

    On the other hand, a herring bone floor of bricks laid on their edge would look REALLY cool...

    Leave a comment:


  • dbhansen
    started a topic Oven floor design: thickness & insulation

    Oven floor design: thickness & insulation

    I've been reading multiple posts discussing the costs/benefits of adding insulation under the oven floor and/or making the floor thicker, but I'm still confused. I'm designing a 42" WFO mostly for bread for family/friend use, but pizza parties too. My wood sources and time are limited. Can anyone explain to me:

    (a) Is it beneficial to have more than 2" of FB Board under the oven floor? Can you never have too much insulation under the floor (or over the dome)? I was thinking of using 1 layer of FB Board between the cement hearth and oven floor, but would it be beneficial to put 2-4" of vermiculite concrete in there as well, or 2 layers of insulating board?

    (b) In combination with more insulation, what is the effect of adding thickness to the oven floor, such as turning the bricks on their side or adding splits? Longer firings but longer heat retention? What about temperature? I am hoping for relatively quick firings for relatively small quantities of food (a few pizzas and 6-10 loaves of bread). It sounds like the standard 2.25" floor should be fine. Will a thicker floor contribute to scorching or do anything else to the cooking process itself? Should I consider it if I may want to do 2+ batches of bread?

    I wish I could just "try out" both and see what works, but it seems there's no turning back once it's built.
    Last edited by dbhansen; 04-01-2008, 09:54 AM.
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