I'm on year two of my build with countless hours the forum and the drawing board. The plan is 38" brick low-dome WFO, inspired by a true neapolitan pizza oven. Will hopefully start a build thread later, but have a design question for now...
Since the goal is to have it as close to a neapolitan as possible, I'm trying to keep the tunnel/opening as short as possible. Both for appearance and to have easy reach into the oven. Hence I'm planning to build a steel flue gallery that is installed outside (fixed onto the concrete slap, not shown in pictures).
I'm somewhat worried that the draw will be lacking since there are no sidewalls to lead the smoke as the common way. I've seen some similar designs, but haven't read any reviews on it. And one could say it is pretty close to the layout of a true neapolitan pizza oven, but in the real one the flue is incorporated into the insulation and gets free heating to make sure the draw is strong I guess.
What do you think about this concept and does anyone have any field-proven experience of similar design?
Sticking with the concept, an alternative installation approach is for me to attach it to the internal steel buttress (green in pictures), here it would get heated automatically to maybe create strong draw. But I believe this would act as a heat zink for heat retention after use, which is one thing I'm trying to optimize with the tunnel/flue design. Don't you think? Other cons, need to have steel going through the insulation/render, i.e. expansion cracks, worse waterproofing, etc.
Since the goal is to have it as close to a neapolitan as possible, I'm trying to keep the tunnel/opening as short as possible. Both for appearance and to have easy reach into the oven. Hence I'm planning to build a steel flue gallery that is installed outside (fixed onto the concrete slap, not shown in pictures).
I'm somewhat worried that the draw will be lacking since there are no sidewalls to lead the smoke as the common way. I've seen some similar designs, but haven't read any reviews on it. And one could say it is pretty close to the layout of a true neapolitan pizza oven, but in the real one the flue is incorporated into the insulation and gets free heating to make sure the draw is strong I guess.
What do you think about this concept and does anyone have any field-proven experience of similar design?
Sticking with the concept, an alternative installation approach is for me to attach it to the internal steel buttress (green in pictures), here it would get heated automatically to maybe create strong draw. But I believe this would act as a heat zink for heat retention after use, which is one thing I'm trying to optimize with the tunnel/flue design. Don't you think? Other cons, need to have steel going through the insulation/render, i.e. expansion cracks, worse waterproofing, etc.
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