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Looks like FB cuts small strips of the blanket and then trims the tops to mate together. Is that the best plan?
I think that it is very close. If I had it to do again, I would take a little more time with my blanket insulation. I followed advice from an industrial insulator friend of mine and I ended up with a lumpy mess. It took a thick layer of vermicrete to get it back to a perfect sphere. I would fit it very close and stagger the splices as much as possible between layers. If you are going to enclose the dome, or shape with a vermicrete layer, lumpy wont matter. If you are going to apply stucco to lath, it will imo.
EDIT: kerrected spellin
Last edited by Gulf; 05-26-2018, 04:15 PM.
Reason: Corrected
Joe Watson " A year from now, you will wish that you had started today" My Build Album / My Build
I think you all mean lath (rhymes with bath), the supporting substrate for plaster (traditionally thin pieces of wood, but now steel or aluminum mesh). A lathe (like bathe) is a tool you use to turn wood or metal. You'll get funny looks asking at the store for one when you mean the other.
Thanks Joe. Yep 50 square foot per roll. FB says one roll will insulate a 42 inch oven ONE INCH thick. The part i missed was was the one inch bit. Ordered 2 more rolls.
Working on a plan to extend the landing zone a bit.
I may of missed something. I figured that 2 rolls total was all that you needed. I figured the area for a 22 " radius. I'll look at it again when I get back in front of the computer.
Joe Watson " A year from now, you will wish that you had started today" My Build Album / My Build
I just finished my 36" oven and I did 2 layers of 1 1/2" CF It took two rolls and left nothing extra really. Photo shows what I covered with the two rolls. I did what others showed, I put some nails/pins into the Calsil board and the ran wire over in an alternating pattern to hold the blanket in place. It worked very well.
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