Hi all,
I'm new to the forum?thanks for the great resource. Like many I'm building a 42" Pompeii, but I'm building a house at the same time. So, I want to build the oven and locate it temporarily on the property, then re-install it in a permanent location in 2-3 years. Anyone done something like this? I searched the forum but didn't see anything specific.
I don't want to build it onto a trailer; just make a base frame embedded in my structural concrete layer that's strong enough to be lifted from 4 points on the sides with my backhoe. I have pallet forks for the bucket, but I think the oven will be too heavy with the center of gravity too far out on the forks to be safe (anyone ever weighed one of these finished ovens?).
Metalworking is not a problem, and I have the lifting capability; just curious if someone has some direct experience on things to do/not do. I'm planning a rebar-reinforced 4" concrete slab with an octagonal perimeter frame made from welded 3" x 1/4" angle steel; I think that will be strong enough. Might weld the rebar into the frame to make it extra rigid.
Many thanks,
Mark
I'm new to the forum?thanks for the great resource. Like many I'm building a 42" Pompeii, but I'm building a house at the same time. So, I want to build the oven and locate it temporarily on the property, then re-install it in a permanent location in 2-3 years. Anyone done something like this? I searched the forum but didn't see anything specific.
I don't want to build it onto a trailer; just make a base frame embedded in my structural concrete layer that's strong enough to be lifted from 4 points on the sides with my backhoe. I have pallet forks for the bucket, but I think the oven will be too heavy with the center of gravity too far out on the forks to be safe (anyone ever weighed one of these finished ovens?).
Metalworking is not a problem, and I have the lifting capability; just curious if someone has some direct experience on things to do/not do. I'm planning a rebar-reinforced 4" concrete slab with an octagonal perimeter frame made from welded 3" x 1/4" angle steel; I think that will be strong enough. Might weld the rebar into the frame to make it extra rigid.
Many thanks,
Mark
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