Hello everyone!
I am based in Sudbury, Suffolk UK and me and my husband are building a wood fired oven and have no prior construction experience. AT ALL! Progress has been slow (and scary!) - foundations dug in 2017, foundation and block stand finished in 2018 and we are hoping to finish the rest of it this year. It all started when we stayed in a holiday cottage that had a pizza oven and we were renting a flat without a garden.....thus the vision was created!!
We are following the FB plans for a 42" Pompeii oven, pretty much to the letter so far with extra research on the web, especially this site - so thank you for the help provided so far!
We have a stand made from concrete blocks with everyone other gap filled with concrete and rebar with a 4" slab and on top of that a 5:1 vermiculite and cement mix which is 3.5" thick - a bit less than we had planned but still within guidelines. Not mixed as per the notes - we used larger particle vermiculate and hoped that the cement mixer would break it down to a smaller size. There are no steam pipes because the notes don't include them but some people are including them in their ovens.
The floor of the heart will be made of storage heater bricks trimmed down to size so soldier bricks can be laid around the edge using firebricks and then the dome will be formed out of half bricks (so there will be big gaps) - the question I have is what mortar do I use? The FB notes suggest a high heat mortar which can be bought or made up using sand, cement, fireclay and lime (10:2:6:3). Where I am getting confused is most of the sites selling mortar suggest using it to 6mm thickness max and using a heat proof screed to fill the bigger gaps but looking at other builds it looks as though just mortar is used.
My question is can I use the homemade refractory mortar to both cement the bricks together and fill the gaps on the outside of the oven?
I've posted a pic of where we are so far so you can see progress (sorry cancel that, I can't get them to upload at the moment) - all comments and guidance greatfully received!
Thanks in advance
Roberta
I am based in Sudbury, Suffolk UK and me and my husband are building a wood fired oven and have no prior construction experience. AT ALL! Progress has been slow (and scary!) - foundations dug in 2017, foundation and block stand finished in 2018 and we are hoping to finish the rest of it this year. It all started when we stayed in a holiday cottage that had a pizza oven and we were renting a flat without a garden.....thus the vision was created!!
We are following the FB plans for a 42" Pompeii oven, pretty much to the letter so far with extra research on the web, especially this site - so thank you for the help provided so far!
We have a stand made from concrete blocks with everyone other gap filled with concrete and rebar with a 4" slab and on top of that a 5:1 vermiculite and cement mix which is 3.5" thick - a bit less than we had planned but still within guidelines. Not mixed as per the notes - we used larger particle vermiculate and hoped that the cement mixer would break it down to a smaller size. There are no steam pipes because the notes don't include them but some people are including them in their ovens.
The floor of the heart will be made of storage heater bricks trimmed down to size so soldier bricks can be laid around the edge using firebricks and then the dome will be formed out of half bricks (so there will be big gaps) - the question I have is what mortar do I use? The FB notes suggest a high heat mortar which can be bought or made up using sand, cement, fireclay and lime (10:2:6:3). Where I am getting confused is most of the sites selling mortar suggest using it to 6mm thickness max and using a heat proof screed to fill the bigger gaps but looking at other builds it looks as though just mortar is used.
My question is can I use the homemade refractory mortar to both cement the bricks together and fill the gaps on the outside of the oven?
I've posted a pic of where we are so far so you can see progress (sorry cancel that, I can't get them to upload at the moment) - all comments and guidance greatfully received!
Thanks in advance
Roberta
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