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That's really odd. Every masonry supply place I've been to around Boston has it. (I would not expect home depot, lowes or similar to have it) If worst comes to worst, try Amazon. Free delivery with prime.
My build thread: https://tinyurl.com/y8bx7hbd
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Glad you found some locally. I haven't bought any in a very long time, but I expect a dollar a pound is wicked expensive, as you might expect for shipping a heavy product across the country for two day delivery. The Heatstop 50 I used was $50-60 a bag-- pricey, but easy for mixing up many small batches of mortar. I used about 2-1/2 bags for my 42" oven. Compared to everything else involved in the project it was relatively cheap.
Look forward to your build!My build thread: https://tinyurl.com/y8bx7hbd
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Originally posted by rwiegand View PostThat's really odd. Every masonry supply place I've been to around Boston has it. (I would not expect home depot, lowes or similar to have it) If worst comes to worst, try Amazon. Free delivery with prime.
https://www.amazon.com/Mutual-Indust...ag=googhydr-20My Build Pictures
https://onedrive.live.com/?authkey=%...18BD00F374765D
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I just priced powdered fire clay and its $65 for 50lb bag at a supply house near me...was figuring it would be cheaper.My Build Pictures
https://onedrive.live.com/?authkey=%...18BD00F374765D
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Just make sure it's hydrated, slaked or burnt lime, not agricultural/garden lime.
I'm glad you didn't get the Qikrete. The SDS says the lime is limestone. Wrong lime for our purpose.
It amazes me how much trouble it is to find hydrated lime in some parts of the world.
I live in a little town of 14,000 people and I can think of three places off the top of my head that sell it.
Can't get fire bricks, fire clay, or ciment fondu for love or money but, hey, lime is easy. And cheap. About 50c Australian per pound.
Perhaps it's because I only live about 1 1/2 hours from the Limestone Coast.
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