Hi all... and maybe specifically david s ? I'm mid construction of my oven... all going well thus far, concrete block base, perlite concrete insulation layer, super duty firebrick floor. It's DOME TIME!
(Thanks, by the way, for waving me off he exercise ball approach... not so much for the ball as the perlite material. Didn't dawn on me that it wouldn't have the thermal mass that I wanted until I read it here.)
I'm going to do the sand mound thing and then cover it with homebrew 3:1:1:1 (unless advised otherwise in strong terms). I've got the cement, sand, and lime. What I don't have is fire clay. What I DO have is a big bag of kaolin clay (for coating fruit trees). I'll never use up it for that. Wondering if kaolin would be a satisfactory clay for this purpose. It's not fire clay, per se, but I can't imagine this thing will get hot enough to make that a necessity.
Thus far, I've been unable to locate either stainless steel needles or the appropriate polypropylene fibers here in Portland, so I'm going to have to go without (again, unless someone tells me that one or both are genuinely required and not just nice-to-have.)
And, just to bring it all on topic... if anyone reading happens to know of sources for these remaining ingredients in Portland, I'd love to hear about it.
(Thanks, by the way, for waving me off he exercise ball approach... not so much for the ball as the perlite material. Didn't dawn on me that it wouldn't have the thermal mass that I wanted until I read it here.)
I'm going to do the sand mound thing and then cover it with homebrew 3:1:1:1 (unless advised otherwise in strong terms). I've got the cement, sand, and lime. What I don't have is fire clay. What I DO have is a big bag of kaolin clay (for coating fruit trees). I'll never use up it for that. Wondering if kaolin would be a satisfactory clay for this purpose. It's not fire clay, per se, but I can't imagine this thing will get hot enough to make that a necessity.
Thus far, I've been unable to locate either stainless steel needles or the appropriate polypropylene fibers here in Portland, so I'm going to have to go without (again, unless someone tells me that one or both are genuinely required and not just nice-to-have.)
And, just to bring it all on topic... if anyone reading happens to know of sources for these remaining ingredients in Portland, I'd love to hear about it.
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