Hey guys, I'm building a 40" home brew cement oven. I started the curing process as recommended on this forum, slowly increasing the fire size adding approx 100F each time, and letting the oven cool fully before firing again.
Somewhere along the line I started developing hairline cracks in the refractory dome (I wanted to cure & dry out the refractory dome fully before adding insulation layers). I read on here that if you don't have cracks, you probably did something wrong. Okay, fair enough. At one point I added my ceramic wool blanket on top, figuring the easy-to-add insulation would help things, however then I noticed it got soaking wet. I suspected steam from the smoke coming through the cracks, though of course now I realize it was quite possibly water coming out of the cement as well. Being concerned about the potential for moisture to be going up into the insulation layers later on I applied some fireplace sealer cement stuff (https://www.canadiantire.ca/en/pdp/i...-0642704p.html) to the cracks in the hopes of containing any moisture down the line. Then I started increasing temps again, and the sealer just re-cracked along the same lines. Oh well.
My most recent fire got up to about 550F on the floor of the oven, still 300F shy of target, and afterwards I noticed a rather large crack that goes all the way from floor to ceiling on the dome. I'd say it's about 1/8th of a inch at largest - you can see light through it.
This is rather worrying to me. I'd really appreciate it if you guys could weigh in on whether or not you feel this crack is salvageable or what. At this point I'm not sure what to do. Please help! (see pics)
Also - is moisture from the fire going up into the insulation layers a problem or am I off base here?
Many thanks,
Jonathan
Somewhere along the line I started developing hairline cracks in the refractory dome (I wanted to cure & dry out the refractory dome fully before adding insulation layers). I read on here that if you don't have cracks, you probably did something wrong. Okay, fair enough. At one point I added my ceramic wool blanket on top, figuring the easy-to-add insulation would help things, however then I noticed it got soaking wet. I suspected steam from the smoke coming through the cracks, though of course now I realize it was quite possibly water coming out of the cement as well. Being concerned about the potential for moisture to be going up into the insulation layers later on I applied some fireplace sealer cement stuff (https://www.canadiantire.ca/en/pdp/i...-0642704p.html) to the cracks in the hopes of containing any moisture down the line. Then I started increasing temps again, and the sealer just re-cracked along the same lines. Oh well.
My most recent fire got up to about 550F on the floor of the oven, still 300F shy of target, and afterwards I noticed a rather large crack that goes all the way from floor to ceiling on the dome. I'd say it's about 1/8th of a inch at largest - you can see light through it.
This is rather worrying to me. I'd really appreciate it if you guys could weigh in on whether or not you feel this crack is salvageable or what. At this point I'm not sure what to do. Please help! (see pics)
Also - is moisture from the fire going up into the insulation layers a problem or am I off base here?
Many thanks,
Jonathan
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