Hi folks, newbie here.
First off many thanks to everyone who has created this wonderful resource over the years. It is very much appreciated by those of us who are Jonny-come-latelys to the world of DIY wood fired ovens.
Secondly, apologies for the longer post. I'll be more consise in future.
A little about me - I'm Robin. I have just created (2023) a small off-grid glamping site on my farm in North Wales - solar power, reedbeds, compost toilets, etc etc. I am a competent DIYer/bodger. Ty Uchaf Farm Glamping if you want to search for us.
I have been thinking about building a pizza oven for the house/garden for a while, and now plan to start my build in the next few days but will start with one for the glamping site, next to the field kitchen (pic attached).
The Brief: I imagine the glamping pizza oven may get use 2-3 times a week in the summer for pizzas or the occasional steak; and not for extended/multi-use cooking purposes. So I'm planning a relatively simple (and speedy) build to learn some of the lessons ready for building the oven by the house, and I want to see how low a budget I can manage with and still get a usable outcome that will work and last for a minimum of 2-3 years before I need to do it properly. By low budget I'll be cheating as I have plenty of sand, cement, lime and concrete blocks from various other projects. I'm not creating the most beautiful oven - but will want a good looking but rustic finish. The oven will be subject to weather and so will have a waterproof render - but outside of the season I will be covering it with tarp. I may decide (on advice?) to extend the field kitchen roof over the oven.
So, to the plan...
I know, they are not the most popular or interesting builds - but the glamping oven will be a castable exercise-ball approach. This is preferable for me as I can cast in the workshop close to materials and tools and then transport to the glamping field, rather than build with a sand mould on site. Making formwork is no problem and transport is not an issue with a 95hp 40 year old tractor on hand...!
Here is a summary of the plan and the order of works - I would be grateful for advice on any mantraps, bearing in mind I'm not intending to create the world's "best" oven as per above. Indeed - if you think this overspecced for my brief please say so. I was initially considering just a "single skin cement/perlite dome and be damned" approach for my brief.
Base - 100mm of standard concrete on a rammed rubble substrate, straight to earth.
Frame - medium density solid concrete blocks (440x215x100mm) in a square M configuration. Standard brick mortar. Painted with masonry paint.
So far so good - this is how I build my BBQ frames.
Plinth - Shuttered and poured slabs, wooden frames removed after setting. 3 layers: 100mm standard concrete, with gravel aggregate and reinforcing bars. 100mm v-crete (5:1 with a 50:50 mix of vermicultie and perlite). 25mm Firebricks under the dome/gallery in a herringbone pattern, sitting on a thin layer of sand/fireclay to level and set within 25mm of vcrete (5:1) to the edge of the plinth. I may put a 10mm thermal break between the oven and the gallery bricks and fill with 10:1 vcrete. I will leave a week between each slab I guess.
Dome/gallery - 85cm exercise ball and wooden frame for gallery as per the standard approach. Door rebate in the frame, and a funnel at the base of the flue. The internal height of the gallery will be around 27cm (63%) based upon internal height of dome of 42.5cm. Gallery internal width will be 40cm and length 30cm. Flue diameter will be 100mm single skin flue - height of flue tbc.
I was going to cast in 4 layers: Firstly a dense refractory layer of 50mm of homebrew 3:1:1:1, with stainless steel needles and poly fibres, then 25mm ceramic blanket and then 50mm insultaing layer of 10:1 v-crete. I'll put a pressure relief valve at the apex of the dome in the v-crete layer to let out steam. Then a thin cement render.
A few questions:
1) Do concrete plinths really need to be so thick, given the weight on top is about 4-500kg spread over three legs? There's massive strength in 100mm standard concrete plus 100m v-crete. Would 50mm of concrete plus 100mm 5:1 v-crete suffice?
2) Rather than a cement render which is waterproof and may trap in moisture and need a valve, I ahve barrels of mature lime putty lying around. Has anyone made a breathable lime/sand only render? Does it need hairing? I'm a bit of a DIYer at lime plaster/mortar/breathable buildings (farmhouse is 1500s) and it seems to me that this could be a solution for a pizza oven dome.. or not?
Thanks for reading this far. I will post pics and progress over the coming weeks.
Robin
First off many thanks to everyone who has created this wonderful resource over the years. It is very much appreciated by those of us who are Jonny-come-latelys to the world of DIY wood fired ovens.
Secondly, apologies for the longer post. I'll be more consise in future.
A little about me - I'm Robin. I have just created (2023) a small off-grid glamping site on my farm in North Wales - solar power, reedbeds, compost toilets, etc etc. I am a competent DIYer/bodger. Ty Uchaf Farm Glamping if you want to search for us.
I have been thinking about building a pizza oven for the house/garden for a while, and now plan to start my build in the next few days but will start with one for the glamping site, next to the field kitchen (pic attached).
The Brief: I imagine the glamping pizza oven may get use 2-3 times a week in the summer for pizzas or the occasional steak; and not for extended/multi-use cooking purposes. So I'm planning a relatively simple (and speedy) build to learn some of the lessons ready for building the oven by the house, and I want to see how low a budget I can manage with and still get a usable outcome that will work and last for a minimum of 2-3 years before I need to do it properly. By low budget I'll be cheating as I have plenty of sand, cement, lime and concrete blocks from various other projects. I'm not creating the most beautiful oven - but will want a good looking but rustic finish. The oven will be subject to weather and so will have a waterproof render - but outside of the season I will be covering it with tarp. I may decide (on advice?) to extend the field kitchen roof over the oven.
So, to the plan...
I know, they are not the most popular or interesting builds - but the glamping oven will be a castable exercise-ball approach. This is preferable for me as I can cast in the workshop close to materials and tools and then transport to the glamping field, rather than build with a sand mould on site. Making formwork is no problem and transport is not an issue with a 95hp 40 year old tractor on hand...!
Here is a summary of the plan and the order of works - I would be grateful for advice on any mantraps, bearing in mind I'm not intending to create the world's "best" oven as per above. Indeed - if you think this overspecced for my brief please say so. I was initially considering just a "single skin cement/perlite dome and be damned" approach for my brief.
Base - 100mm of standard concrete on a rammed rubble substrate, straight to earth.
Frame - medium density solid concrete blocks (440x215x100mm) in a square M configuration. Standard brick mortar. Painted with masonry paint.
So far so good - this is how I build my BBQ frames.
Plinth - Shuttered and poured slabs, wooden frames removed after setting. 3 layers: 100mm standard concrete, with gravel aggregate and reinforcing bars. 100mm v-crete (5:1 with a 50:50 mix of vermicultie and perlite). 25mm Firebricks under the dome/gallery in a herringbone pattern, sitting on a thin layer of sand/fireclay to level and set within 25mm of vcrete (5:1) to the edge of the plinth. I may put a 10mm thermal break between the oven and the gallery bricks and fill with 10:1 vcrete. I will leave a week between each slab I guess.
Dome/gallery - 85cm exercise ball and wooden frame for gallery as per the standard approach. Door rebate in the frame, and a funnel at the base of the flue. The internal height of the gallery will be around 27cm (63%) based upon internal height of dome of 42.5cm. Gallery internal width will be 40cm and length 30cm. Flue diameter will be 100mm single skin flue - height of flue tbc.
I was going to cast in 4 layers: Firstly a dense refractory layer of 50mm of homebrew 3:1:1:1, with stainless steel needles and poly fibres, then 25mm ceramic blanket and then 50mm insultaing layer of 10:1 v-crete. I'll put a pressure relief valve at the apex of the dome in the v-crete layer to let out steam. Then a thin cement render.
A few questions:
1) Do concrete plinths really need to be so thick, given the weight on top is about 4-500kg spread over three legs? There's massive strength in 100mm standard concrete plus 100m v-crete. Would 50mm of concrete plus 100mm 5:1 v-crete suffice?
2) Rather than a cement render which is waterproof and may trap in moisture and need a valve, I ahve barrels of mature lime putty lying around. Has anyone made a breathable lime/sand only render? Does it need hairing? I'm a bit of a DIYer at lime plaster/mortar/breathable buildings (farmhouse is 1500s) and it seems to me that this could be a solution for a pizza oven dome.. or not?
Thanks for reading this far. I will post pics and progress over the coming weeks.
Robin
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