Re: Water heating brick stove
The stove heat will be shared between the two rooms so I cut the wall between the two rooms to allow for heat sharing. I cut the floor too to enable for pouring a slab and putting an insulation over. To my surprise, I found a slab already under the floor tiles so I didn't need to pour one.
The cut was done using an angle grinder. Such an amazing tool, just 1-2 cm deep cuts could control destroying the wall as well as the floor so the hammer strokes did not affect the areas outside the cuts!,
I poured (white) cement all around the cuts in the floor to support the surrounding cut floor tiles. The white block wall-side is because I found a big crack under the wall and wanted to support it.
A lesson I learned from using a hammer and a chisel for destroying; so many slight strokes are better than a few strong ones. I reckon the opposite holds for hole opening; one strong stroke opens a neat small hole. I used the second rule when I opened a hole in the wall for the water tube.
The stove heat will be shared between the two rooms so I cut the wall between the two rooms to allow for heat sharing. I cut the floor too to enable for pouring a slab and putting an insulation over. To my surprise, I found a slab already under the floor tiles so I didn't need to pour one.
The cut was done using an angle grinder. Such an amazing tool, just 1-2 cm deep cuts could control destroying the wall as well as the floor so the hammer strokes did not affect the areas outside the cuts!,
I poured (white) cement all around the cuts in the floor to support the surrounding cut floor tiles. The white block wall-side is because I found a big crack under the wall and wanted to support it.
A lesson I learned from using a hammer and a chisel for destroying; so many slight strokes are better than a few strong ones. I reckon the opposite holds for hole opening; one strong stroke opens a neat small hole. I used the second rule when I opened a hole in the wall for the water tube.
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