Re: High Heat Loss
Hi all:
This thread is old, but hopefully someone out there is still listening. I have what appears to be a heat loss problem as well. It might be a curing problem, or maybe some other design flaw that I don't understand. Anyway, when I fire the oven, I can get it up to temperature (500+), but have not had a really nice clearing yet (where the black all turns white and falls away) and have pretty fast heat loss (down to 300 within an hour, 200 within 2 hours). This is a "modified" Pompeii, with 4" firebrick hearth, a 19" dome, 30" diameter floor, and 10"x16" door. On top of the brick dome, I have one inch of mortar, followed by a mix of vermiculate for the bottom half of the dome and 4" of insulfrax over the top. Then stucco over the whole thing. I haven't insulated the floor yet, which is a 3" concrete slab, with the firebricks sitting on top of that (see photo). When I fire the oven, the outside top of the dome gets barely warm, and the bottom of the slab gets warm/hot, but not more than 50C or so. The area around the flue gets quite hot, but I don't know that this is avoidable, right? I have a metal/wood door with 2" of insulfrax, which I use during firing (cracked, to allow air in) and after pulling out the fire (cutting off the flue). I have only fired this thing hot 4 times, and had rain in between, so it could just be that it is too exposed to the weather and is not drying out ever. I also might need to fire longer or hotter or both. Any other thoughts, other than getting that floor insulated?
Thanks for any input y'all might have.
Mateo
Austin, TX
Hi all:
This thread is old, but hopefully someone out there is still listening. I have what appears to be a heat loss problem as well. It might be a curing problem, or maybe some other design flaw that I don't understand. Anyway, when I fire the oven, I can get it up to temperature (500+), but have not had a really nice clearing yet (where the black all turns white and falls away) and have pretty fast heat loss (down to 300 within an hour, 200 within 2 hours). This is a "modified" Pompeii, with 4" firebrick hearth, a 19" dome, 30" diameter floor, and 10"x16" door. On top of the brick dome, I have one inch of mortar, followed by a mix of vermiculate for the bottom half of the dome and 4" of insulfrax over the top. Then stucco over the whole thing. I haven't insulated the floor yet, which is a 3" concrete slab, with the firebricks sitting on top of that (see photo). When I fire the oven, the outside top of the dome gets barely warm, and the bottom of the slab gets warm/hot, but not more than 50C or so. The area around the flue gets quite hot, but I don't know that this is avoidable, right? I have a metal/wood door with 2" of insulfrax, which I use during firing (cracked, to allow air in) and after pulling out the fire (cutting off the flue). I have only fired this thing hot 4 times, and had rain in between, so it could just be that it is too exposed to the weather and is not drying out ever. I also might need to fire longer or hotter or both. Any other thoughts, other than getting that floor insulated?
Thanks for any input y'all might have.
Mateo
Austin, TX
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