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Ran through your build over a couple of beers after I'd finished off digging out for my slab.
That's the problem with this forum. There are so many great ovens being put together that it's quite an encouragement for a klutz like me to get inspiration. But then...there are so many great ovens being put together that it's kinda scary to think I could should even attempt one. But I've made a start so there's no going back now. Congrats on yours. It looks fantastic.
And I see we like the same beer. I may not know much about pizza ovens yet but I do know beer and that Sierra Nevada pale ale (or at least the IPA) is in my top ten in its class. Wife and I had a 5 week holiday in the States last year and I was in seventh heaven. I was SO impressed with the quantity, the availability and the quality of your beers.
Ahhh, good beer and a home made pizza. What else does a man need...
First, thanks for the compliment. I'm glad you are going ahead w/your build. There are lots and lots of good, friendly and knowledgeable folks on here to help you along the way. Do alot of reading when you can to soak it all up. You'll do fine. Remember to start your own build thread when you can and take plenty of photos to share. They help alot.
I placed a vapor barrier between the hearth slab and the insulation layer. If you check out my build, it may be easier to understand.
Ran through your build over a couple of beers after I'd finished off digging out for my slab.
That's the problem with this forum. There are so many great ovens being put together that it's quite an encouragement for a klutz like me to get inspiration. But then...there are so many great ovens being put together that it's kinda scary to think I could should even attempt one. But I've made a start so there's no going back now. Congrats on yours. It looks fantastic.
And I see we like the same beer. I may not know much about pizza ovens yet but I do know beer and that Sierra Nevada pale ale (or at least the IPA) is in my top ten in its class. Wife and I had a 5 week holiday in the States last year and I was in seventh heaven. I was SO impressed with the quantity, the availability and the quality of your beers.
Ahhh, good beer and a home made pizza. What else does a man need...
I placed a vapor barrier between the hearth slab and the insulation layer. If you check out my build, it may be easier to understand. I also placed one under my hearth slab pour and under the base slab. Since you are backfilling the back that high, you should address that, I agree. The more you do to keep moisture away from your actual oven, the better, whether it's groundwater or rain. And water can wick up into concrete and block quite easily, as well as through layers w/out vapor barriers.
A floating slab is the best way to go. You can fill the holes in the block w/dirt, beer cans or whatever is handy.
Floating slab it is, then.
From your description it sounds like you've put a plastic vapour barrier between each course of blocks. Maybe I've read that wrong as I would assume that the concrete fill would break that barrier. And on the back of my blockwork support walls I'll be backfilling with soil just about up to the hearth, so it's a vapour barrier between the top of the support wall and the hearth I was concerned about.
Would you put the vapour barrier between the top of the support walls and the concrete sheet, then pour the hearth slab on top of that, or would you sit the concrete sheet directly onto the support walls, put a vapour barrier over that and then pour the hearth?
And I like the idea of the time capsule... 'Dear great great great grandson. Sorry about the global warming but I hope the pizzas are still tasting great'.
"......You can fill the holes in the block w/dirt, beer cans or whatever is handy. That's where all my empty concrete mix bags are. Perhaps a beer bottle or three, too.
Eastside, how did you get on with this? I was thinking of doing the same, but more to be able to include vapour barrier between the blockwork walls and the hearth. As NCMan says...
I hadn't realised until reading this thread that the concrete for the hearth was meant to also fill the holes in the blockwork. I'm building the oven against the back wall of my garden and local rules means I have to leave a 450mm gap between the wall and the oven. I was going to back fill this gap with soil up to just below the level of the hearth (plus a little around the sides).
Now I'm concerned about water wicking up to the oven itself, so I thought that Eastsides method of casting a 'floating' slab, plus the inclusion of a vapour barrier would solve my problem.
Anyone see a problem with it? And would the vapour barrier just need to sit on top of the blockwork wall and then lay the concrete sheet onto that and pour the concrete directly onto the sheet? Or would it be best to lay the concrete sheet directly onto the blockwork wall and put a vapour barrier between that and the poured concrete?
I'll still pour concrete in every other hole in the blocks (with a reo bar), but it will be physically separate from the hearth.
And as I have a hell of a lot of dirt to get rid of, I was going to fill the remainder of the block holes with soil. Less to manhandle to the front of the house into the skip. Is that a dumb thing to do?
A floating slab is the best way to go. You can fill the holes in the block w/dirt, beer cans or whatever is handy. That's where all my empty concrete mix bags are, along w/a time capsule inside an otherwise empty Gatorade bottle. Perhaps a beer bottle or three, too. It makes no difference. If you dry stacked your block, it's best to fill the corners and a few others w/concrete for strength. The weight of the slab rests on the top of the block, not what's in it. Just remember to place a layer of plastic between each layer for both a vapor barrier and a bond break and be sure it extends all the way to all edges for a total separation of the slab and wall.
If the oven is adequately insulated then the supporting slab will not get hot. Even when the oven has been cranking away solidly all night the supporting slab should only feel warm to the touch from underneath. Concrete sitting in full sun gets way hotter than that. So I don't think you have anything to worry about.
So now imMy thought is to now do this:
Fill the blocks with concrete so that the perimeter CMU blocks are strong and solid. Then after creating a wooden support structure over the wood storage compartments, lay concrete backer board over EVERYTHING. This way the concrete filled CMU blocks will have backer board on top of them followed by the concrete hearth slab. The hearth slab can freely expand and contract as it sits atop concrete backer board.
Eastside, how did you get on with this? I was thinking of doing the same, but more to be able to include vapour barrier between the blockwork walls and the hearth. As NCMan says...
A vapor barrier under your hearth slab also acts as a bond break. But, if the slab is tied in w/rebar into the wall, it's only good for a partial vapor barrier. Then, after pouring your slab, you can place another one between the slab and your insulation layer, if you use a wet mix. This is all "best practice" and I recommend doing it. It's up to you to decide.
I hadn't realised until reading this thread that the concrete for the hearth was meant to also fill the holes in the blockwork. I'm building the oven against the back wall of my garden and local rules means I have to leave a 450mm gap between the wall and the oven. I was going to back fill this gap with soil up to just below the level of the hearth (plus a little around the sides).
Now I'm concerned about water wicking up to the oven itself, so I thought that Eastsides method of casting a 'floating' slab, plus the inclusion of a vapour barrier would solve my problem.
Anyone see a problem with it? And would the vapour barrier just need to sit on top of the blockwork wall and then lay the concrete sheet onto that and pour the concrete directly onto the sheet? Or would it be best to lay the concrete sheet directly onto the blockwork wall and put a vapour barrier between that and the poured concrete?
I'll still pour concrete in every other hole in the blocks (with a reo bar), but it will be physically separate from the hearth.
And as I have a hell of a lot of dirt to get rid of, I was going to fill the remainder of the block holes with soil. Less to manhandle to the front of the house into the skip. Is that a dumb thing to do?
NCman, vapor barriers between what exactly? Do tell.
TB, yeah I knew I was getting into the "Over thinking" phase.
To remedy my concerns im going to get more insulation beyond what the kit comes with. Any suggested material? I dont see any place on FBs site where one can just order another sheet of insulated board.
A vapor barrier under your hearth slab also acts as a bond break. But, if the slab is tied in w/rebar into the wall, it's only good for a partial vapor barrier. Then, after pouring your slab, you can place another one between the slab and your insulation layer, if you use a wet mix. This is all "best practice" and I recommend doing it. It's up to you to decide.
NCman, vapor barriers between what exactly? Do tell.
TB, yeah I knew I was getting into the "Over thinking" phase.
To remedy my concerns im going to get more insulation beyond what the kit comes with. Any suggested material? I dont see any place on FBs site where one can just order another sheet of insulated board.
Ive read books where those building ovens for bread baking will build in Ash chutes. Naturally any break up of contact from one object to another creates a break, so I can see where an ash dump helps. I plan on just creating a 1/4 inch gap between my hearth stone and the landing material (not sure what ill use yet). Ill let the ash that will accumulate fill in the gap. Its not a big gap, but it does break up the direct contact.
I see that the instructions given through FB seem to suggest filling the voids with scrap (they say to use your empty bags) and then fill the corners, or every other cell, with concrete. nowhere do they say to NOT fill this in at the time of pouring the hearth slab. I was close to doing just that. I framed in the openings of my two compartments and was going to go buy tome 1/2 inch concrete board. Then I was going to frame everything and pour concrete in, filling in the entire surface as well as filling in those empty cells. From a structural standpoint it seems like a very sound way to go, and it was exactly what I planned to do. Then again, I say that when Im taking into consideration structural integrity, shifting, and overall sturdyness. Thats to say, thats a logical approach if I didnt take into consideration the reaction that Concrete has when exposed to high heat. I do go back to FB again and wonder why this isnt stated as being a potential issue to be careful of. Does their insulation layers do that good of a job at preventing heat from transfering to the concrete slab?
When I look at the Alan Scott design, his floating slab is suspended simply by the rebar that sits atop the frame. Someone else brought up the fact that the rebar is subject to weakening and rusting over time. I thought that was a solid point as well.
So now im completely perplexed. The concrete hearth is the foundation that the entire upper wall and roof structure would be built on. If this slab is going to expand such that it would break things then I shouldnt build the walls on top of it. It would seem to me that I should do the following. Follow my logic and by ALL means chime in with your thoughts. If im going overboard, forgetting something, or just plane crazy, I value your contributions and thoughts.
What I WAS going to do:
Frame the inner voids that are going to be the ceiling of the wood storage compartments. Build a supported wood frame and make sure that the concrete backer board is sitting flush with the top of the surrounding cinder blocks. then frame the perimeter of the structure, pour concrete to fill in the entire surface, and I will be left with a structural hearth base that is also filling in the open cells of the top row of blocks.
My thought is to now do this:
Fill the blocks with concrete so that the perimeter CMU blocks are strong and solid. Then after creating a wooden support structure over the wood storage compartments, lay concrete backer board over EVERYTHING. This way the concrete filled CMU blocks will have backer board on top of them followed by the concrete hearth slab. The hearth slab can freely expand and contract as it sits atop concrete backer board. While this seems great for the slab to move, I have NO idea now how im going to build the upper walls when they were always going to be a gable style roof built directly off the concrete slab per the FB instructions.
My other thought, and by far the simplest, is to beef up the 3" of insulation board that comes with the kit, and add more ceramic insulation sheet(s). I could go with 4-5 inches total of insulation thus mitigating the heat transfer to the concrete slab beneath it. it makes sense that there has to be a certain degree of heat that is reached before concrete expands. It also makes sense that building a 5" inch slab instead of a 3 1/2" slab would create greater mass to absorb the heat before it gets to a point where it will expand. so in essence, add more floor insulation and make it a thicker slab as well. I DONT want to build walls and put expensive stone vaneer on walls that will shift and crack.
Im not hearing others report problems they are having with their bases being broken. Is that to say that the insulation panels provided actually do a fantastic job at preventing the concrete from actually getting hot to begin with? Somewhere in here there is a simple answer, I just need to find it.
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