Hi!
I'm new to this forum being that I just registered today but I have definitely been doing a lot of reading around on here and finding tons and tons of useful info.
I have wanted a Wood fired pizza oven for years but never really thought it was anything but just a dream until a few months ago when then idea got brought back up after having finished re-landscaping our entire yard by removing some trees, adding grass, a homeade wood table, and the piece de resistance a 120" projector screen and surround sound system for outdoor movie nights (All in our 30x30 backyard for about 1k$). Anyway, now that we actually have a usable backyard and frequently have people over for movies, and the fact that I love to bake pizza brought the idea of a pizza oven up again.
Since then I have been searching all over the net finding and reading every article about pizza ovens I can find, learning how it is they cook, being amazed that you can cook a pizza in 90secs, understanding the difference between refractory and insulatory layers, and just plain being overwhelmed and amazed at how complex pizza ovens really are. So I have decided to come to the experts and throw some ideas around and see if I can't get some plans drawn up and then actually start working on one.
So here's a rough idea of what I'm thinking. I'm gonna do a concrete foundation with a cinder block wall sitting on top. Form poured on top of that will be a concrete pad of several inches thick. Then on that would go the Insulation layer, then a firebrick floor. The dome on that would be a 36" dome made of a 3inch thick refractory cement covered by 4 inches of the same insulation layer that is under the firebrick (Probably a vermiculite, sand, cement mix). Then over the top of the insulation layer would be a tinted stucco. That's the rough idea I have, now for my questions and concerns.
pretty much all of my questions/concerns are about the dome as the pad and platform its going to sit on is going to be a cake walk to build no matter how we end up doing it.
My main thing is building the dome out of a refractory cement. I'm looking to cut cost anywhere and everywhere I can without loosing performance or durability if at all possible. After looking at the number of bricks it would take as well as the cost it seems that it would be around 500$ just to build the refractory layer which is way more then I can afford to spend. I am hoping that I will be able to do the entire project for around that cost but we will see.
I've seen a few people on here make ovens out of a high heat castable and it seems like it has gone off well. I plan on using the recipe that is floating around here of Cement, Fire clay, lime and sand, in a 1-1-1-3 mixture. My concern with this is 2 fold.
1. Strength. I'm concerned about casting a 36inch dome out of castable cement without any kind of reinforcements. For you guys who have experience working with this stuff, how well can I expect it to stand up without any kind of internal reinforcement?
2. Cracking. I'm also concerned about having it crack on me, either while its drying/curing, or after a few baking cycles. I've seen people make them into several pieces, and I've also heard of people mixing in rope fibers to make micro steam tubes for pressure release. Which one of these ideas is better? Should I do both?
Another thing I would love to see you guys weigh in on is dome or barrel. I plan to doing mainly pizzas in the oven, but I also like to bake bread on occasion, and I think it would be fun to do a turkey or roast on occasion as well. What shape would you say is more versatile, dome or barrel? Why?
Also what about size? I threw a 36inch dome out there but to be completely honest I don't know what size I would want. I would love to be able to bake a few loves of bread at a time, I want it to be easy to use, but I also want it to be casual user friendly in the fact that I won't be using it every day, or even every week and I don't want it to take 100 hours to get up to temperature. What size would you recommend and why?
Another small thing but still a question and concern of mine is, when you lay the brick cooking floor do you grout the bricks at all? and
what do you use to adhere it to the insulation layer below? Also, would it be a bad idea to insulate and brick the entire concrete top?Or should I just insulate and brick the cooking floor and do something different for the rest of the top?
As it stands right now I am in the phase of shopping around and looking at material cost, deciding where it should go in the backyard, how tall the platform should be, how big of an oven, what materials, what color, when, and how. I'm trying to get something down on paper soon though so that I can slowly start acquiring the materials and working on things as I get the time/money. I've got no completion deadline as this is just a "for fun" project of mine.
Anyway, I really really appreciate this website. There is so much more about pizza ovens then I could have ever imagined and this site seems to contain a little bit about everything. Thanks for helping me to turn a dream into a reality.
I'm new to this forum being that I just registered today but I have definitely been doing a lot of reading around on here and finding tons and tons of useful info.
I have wanted a Wood fired pizza oven for years but never really thought it was anything but just a dream until a few months ago when then idea got brought back up after having finished re-landscaping our entire yard by removing some trees, adding grass, a homeade wood table, and the piece de resistance a 120" projector screen and surround sound system for outdoor movie nights (All in our 30x30 backyard for about 1k$). Anyway, now that we actually have a usable backyard and frequently have people over for movies, and the fact that I love to bake pizza brought the idea of a pizza oven up again.
Since then I have been searching all over the net finding and reading every article about pizza ovens I can find, learning how it is they cook, being amazed that you can cook a pizza in 90secs, understanding the difference between refractory and insulatory layers, and just plain being overwhelmed and amazed at how complex pizza ovens really are. So I have decided to come to the experts and throw some ideas around and see if I can't get some plans drawn up and then actually start working on one.
So here's a rough idea of what I'm thinking. I'm gonna do a concrete foundation with a cinder block wall sitting on top. Form poured on top of that will be a concrete pad of several inches thick. Then on that would go the Insulation layer, then a firebrick floor. The dome on that would be a 36" dome made of a 3inch thick refractory cement covered by 4 inches of the same insulation layer that is under the firebrick (Probably a vermiculite, sand, cement mix). Then over the top of the insulation layer would be a tinted stucco. That's the rough idea I have, now for my questions and concerns.
pretty much all of my questions/concerns are about the dome as the pad and platform its going to sit on is going to be a cake walk to build no matter how we end up doing it.
My main thing is building the dome out of a refractory cement. I'm looking to cut cost anywhere and everywhere I can without loosing performance or durability if at all possible. After looking at the number of bricks it would take as well as the cost it seems that it would be around 500$ just to build the refractory layer which is way more then I can afford to spend. I am hoping that I will be able to do the entire project for around that cost but we will see.
I've seen a few people on here make ovens out of a high heat castable and it seems like it has gone off well. I plan on using the recipe that is floating around here of Cement, Fire clay, lime and sand, in a 1-1-1-3 mixture. My concern with this is 2 fold.
1. Strength. I'm concerned about casting a 36inch dome out of castable cement without any kind of reinforcements. For you guys who have experience working with this stuff, how well can I expect it to stand up without any kind of internal reinforcement?
2. Cracking. I'm also concerned about having it crack on me, either while its drying/curing, or after a few baking cycles. I've seen people make them into several pieces, and I've also heard of people mixing in rope fibers to make micro steam tubes for pressure release. Which one of these ideas is better? Should I do both?
Another thing I would love to see you guys weigh in on is dome or barrel. I plan to doing mainly pizzas in the oven, but I also like to bake bread on occasion, and I think it would be fun to do a turkey or roast on occasion as well. What shape would you say is more versatile, dome or barrel? Why?
Also what about size? I threw a 36inch dome out there but to be completely honest I don't know what size I would want. I would love to be able to bake a few loves of bread at a time, I want it to be easy to use, but I also want it to be casual user friendly in the fact that I won't be using it every day, or even every week and I don't want it to take 100 hours to get up to temperature. What size would you recommend and why?
Another small thing but still a question and concern of mine is, when you lay the brick cooking floor do you grout the bricks at all? and
what do you use to adhere it to the insulation layer below? Also, would it be a bad idea to insulate and brick the entire concrete top?Or should I just insulate and brick the cooking floor and do something different for the rest of the top?
As it stands right now I am in the phase of shopping around and looking at material cost, deciding where it should go in the backyard, how tall the platform should be, how big of an oven, what materials, what color, when, and how. I'm trying to get something down on paper soon though so that I can slowly start acquiring the materials and working on things as I get the time/money. I've got no completion deadline as this is just a "for fun" project of mine.
Anyway, I really really appreciate this website. There is so much more about pizza ovens then I could have ever imagined and this site seems to contain a little bit about everything. Thanks for helping me to turn a dream into a reality.
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