Re: How do you size an oven for bread making?
More thoughts on oven design-
When I talk to people about radiant floor heating (in Japan called Yuka Donbol) or floor heating, I try to explain the different ways that heat is transferred.
1) by conduction- if I explain this correctly, it is the transfer of heat from one object to the other by direct contact. You have a warm floor--you walk on the floor, your body is warmed by direct contact.
2) by convection- a warm object heats the air and you are warmed by the heated air. But air is a poor conductor of heat--so it takes higher temperature air to warm something.
3) by radiation or radiant heating-- example--the sun is a super hot object; it sends "waves of energy" that heat anything that is in the direct line of sight of the sun. If you are sitting outside on a sunny day at a table--with your arms and upper body above the table---your upper body will be warmed by the sun, but your legs "under the table" will not! Same holds true for sitting by a wood stove. The heat that the stove produces, radiates heat outward in all directions from the firebox. If you are in a direct line of sight from the firebox, you will feel the heat, if there is a wall in between you and the stove, even half high like wainscot height--the area behind the wall will not feel the affects of radiant heating, only the area above will.
Another important aspect--the closer to the radiant heat source, the greater the radiant factor.
So in a round about way, I have determined why the baker's oven is not working properly.
Since the firebox is detached from the actual oven--all affects of radiant heat are lost.
The interior of the oven is only heated by convective heat--heated air heating the oven or heated smoke heating the oven.
The conductive heat--if fire is in actual oven space; coals in direct contact with oven floor... this is not utilized in the oven design of the local bakery.
The radiant heat--flames, fire, coals, only heat the firebox radiantly. The heated air and smoke are the only things that heat the oven and because of poor combustion, the interior never reaches temperatures necessary to burn off the hydrocarbons in the smoke. The oven acts like a smoke "precipitator" or smoke "still"--the unburnt carbons just attach themselves to the cool surfaces of the oven. If continuously fired , at some point the soot would burn away--theoretically, but that temperature is never met.
I'd like some feedback on this assumption... What is your take on this concept?
More thoughts on oven design-
When I talk to people about radiant floor heating (in Japan called Yuka Donbol) or floor heating, I try to explain the different ways that heat is transferred.
1) by conduction- if I explain this correctly, it is the transfer of heat from one object to the other by direct contact. You have a warm floor--you walk on the floor, your body is warmed by direct contact.
2) by convection- a warm object heats the air and you are warmed by the heated air. But air is a poor conductor of heat--so it takes higher temperature air to warm something.
3) by radiation or radiant heating-- example--the sun is a super hot object; it sends "waves of energy" that heat anything that is in the direct line of sight of the sun. If you are sitting outside on a sunny day at a table--with your arms and upper body above the table---your upper body will be warmed by the sun, but your legs "under the table" will not! Same holds true for sitting by a wood stove. The heat that the stove produces, radiates heat outward in all directions from the firebox. If you are in a direct line of sight from the firebox, you will feel the heat, if there is a wall in between you and the stove, even half high like wainscot height--the area behind the wall will not feel the affects of radiant heating, only the area above will.
Another important aspect--the closer to the radiant heat source, the greater the radiant factor.
So in a round about way, I have determined why the baker's oven is not working properly.
Since the firebox is detached from the actual oven--all affects of radiant heat are lost.
The interior of the oven is only heated by convective heat--heated air heating the oven or heated smoke heating the oven.
The conductive heat--if fire is in actual oven space; coals in direct contact with oven floor... this is not utilized in the oven design of the local bakery.
The radiant heat--flames, fire, coals, only heat the firebox radiantly. The heated air and smoke are the only things that heat the oven and because of poor combustion, the interior never reaches temperatures necessary to burn off the hydrocarbons in the smoke. The oven acts like a smoke "precipitator" or smoke "still"--the unburnt carbons just attach themselves to the cool surfaces of the oven. If continuously fired , at some point the soot would burn away--theoretically, but that temperature is never met.
I'd like some feedback on this assumption... What is your take on this concept?
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