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  • Forno Gator
    replied
    Re: New guy with smoke and heat question...

    Originally posted by NYC View Post
    My biggest issue is dismantling the existing oven and enlarging the stand to accommodate the flue landing for a 36" Pompeii. I read the 70+ pages of the plans. Is this a DYI for someone who is very handy (built a few bathrooms from scratch) or would you recommend a mason?

    How is it going?

    I'd not dismantle. Check into making the chimney longer if that helps with draw.... some wood stoves will only draft if the chimney is longer. And to reduce the opening size look at a custom build enclosure for the top of the archway. There is an indoor Forno Oven at an Italian supermarket here, and its bigger than 42" and there are no smoke marks at the opening. They have about 6 inches of stainless steel sheet metal covering the top 6 inches of the archway. This would improve the ratio of your chimney to archway. I am also guessing you could hook up a 600 cfm fan to that and use it only when getting the oven hot. This would be much cheaper than starting over.

    We have a smoke issue too which I'm looking at getting a custom metal worker to work out a fix.... to keep the front archway smoke free. Could be a newbe trying to heat the oven too quickly. The oven is 42" and brand new, just don't like smelling like a camper every time I get the oven fired up... and would like some custom stainless steel metal work to make it more aesthetic.

    If you found a fix let me know.... try a work around before changing your oven.... and it may settle down.

    Leave a comment:


  • DrakeRemoray
    replied
    Re: New guy with smoke and heat question...

    They are probably low or medium duty, either of which would be fine. Find out how much one weighs. Regular low duty 9" firebricks weigh about 8-9 lbs (i think that is right). If they are super light then they would be high duty. But as Dmun says, they are likely low duty (which is really what you want!). High duty are more expensive.

    Leave a comment:


  • NYC
    replied
    Re: New guy with smoke and heat question...

    Originally posted by lwood View Post
    btw, shouldn't the place where your buying the brick have an MSDS on it? In Ca they are required to have an MSDS on everything in the store.
    Not sure what is required but in NYC things don't exactly get done like the rest of the country. People are grumpy.

    Leave a comment:


  • Les
    replied
    Re: New guy with smoke and heat question...

    Originally posted by brickie in oz View Post
    If we all revert back to cubits then there will be no problem....
    ahhh - those were the days! (right - whats a cubit? Insert Bill Cosby here)

    Leave a comment:


  • lwood
    replied
    Re: New guy with smoke and heat question...

    btw, shouldn't the place where your buying the brick have an MSDS on it? In Ca they are required to have an MSDS on everything in the store.

    Leave a comment:


  • brickie in oz
    replied
    Re: New guy with smoke and heat question...

    Originally posted by lwood View Post
    Ok, I will get off my soapbox now. Thanks for listening.
    If we all revert back to cubits then there will be no problem....

    Leave a comment:


  • lwood
    replied
    Re: New guy with smoke and heat question...

    No offence NYC, maybe it a pet peeve of mine. My message was really for everyone in being more precise in their descriptions. The difference in 1 inch and 1 cms is approximately half or x2, which ever way you look at it. It's easy to mistake inches for cms and visa-versa. Temperature is another one where people say 300 deg. 300C is a big difference from 300F.

    Ok, I will get off my soapbox now. Thanks for listening.

    Leave a comment:


  • NYC
    replied
    Re: New guy with smoke and heat question...

    Iwood, sorry for the confusion. Personally I always take units to mean inches and feet and temperature as F. Didn't mean to upset you.

    Dmun, they didn't have a clue as to what grade it was. I guess I will have to research it or order the bricks but trying to avoid having to get heavy stuff shipped. Any idea what the shipping costs are for the 36" Pompeii kit to NYC would be?

    Leave a comment:


  • dmun
    replied
    Re: New guy with smoke and heat question...

    If it's at the local brickyard or mason supply it's almost certainly low duty. It's what they sell to masons to build fireplaces and the like. They're unlikely to tell you the manufacturer, perhaps they don't even know: they just stock what their wholesaler sends them.

    You don't get into the medium and high duty firebricks until you get in to the refractory dealers that are selling materials to build furnaces and kilns. You really don't need higher duty firebricks unless you're building a commercial oven that will be fired every day.

    Leave a comment:


  • lwood
    replied
    Re: New guy with smoke and heat question...

    I guess this is what happens when you leave something to chance. Go back and look at the post with the dimensions. There was no units indicated in the post. No """, nothing.

    There are people on this forum from all over the world. Just because you are from NYC doesn't automatically mean you are speaking in English units. I am from the US and I hate English units but can work with any units, if specified. If I write 300 deg. Is it clear whether I'm talking about deg C or F just based on geography?

    I think we all need to be more precise when asking/giving advice on the forum. Don't presume we know what you are talking about.

    Leave a comment:


  • GianniFocaccia
    replied
    Re: New guy with smoke and heat question...

    Plus you used the universal inch symbol "
    Maybe so, but guys have been stretching the truth of measurements in inches for centuries.

    Leave a comment:


  • Les
    replied
    Re: New guy with smoke and heat question...

    Originally posted by NYC View Post
    Naturally it is inches. I'm in NYC. LOL
    Plus you used the universal inch symbol ".

    Leave a comment:


  • NYC
    replied
    Re: New guy with smoke and heat question...

    Naturally it is inches. I'm in NYC. LOL

    Leave a comment:


  • lwood
    replied
    Re: New guy with smoke and heat question...

    Inches, cm, feet, furlongs......which is it?

    Leave a comment:


  • GianniFocaccia
    replied
    Re: New guy with smoke and heat question...

    Identify the brick manufacturer and get them to email you an MSDS. This will indicate alumina, silcate etc composition.

    Leave a comment:

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