Thinking about the best way to treat the render on my next oven project. The last oven had a stucco render and looks good but here in Canada the winters are very wet and cold. Even though there will be a roof over the ovens I build I want to make sure the stucco treatment is working as well as it can to hold out the outside moisture in the air and yet let the oven somewhat breath for after winter start ups when there may be moisture collecting in the inside of the oven during periods of the oven not being used. The last project had the completed oven sit for 4 months during wet weather and the customer has reported the stucco warm to the touch upon first firing after the winter inactivity. IF its steam inside causing the warmth and I feel it is, then one would want this outer stucco layer to breath somewhat to let out the moisture. Has anyone built a vent on top of the stucco dome render to let out moisture if it collects inside the oven and then also go with a coating on the stucco to try and make it more water proof. I was thinking if a person went with a small vent on the top of cook dome you could make the stucco more waterproof with a top coat of something, but maybe just the vent would be worth considering.
This also bring up question I have thought about, I see some ovens with a tiled outer covering. I would think its only the grout lines that would let out moisture as the tiles are not porus at all so how do these ovens work if and when moisture gets into the inside of the oven. I would think the steam would then get trapped between cook dome , insulation and tiles?
This also bring up question I have thought about, I see some ovens with a tiled outer covering. I would think its only the grout lines that would let out moisture as the tiles are not porus at all so how do these ovens work if and when moisture gets into the inside of the oven. I would think the steam would then get trapped between cook dome , insulation and tiles?
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