Re: Lime mortar & wood ovens?
Hi Dutch (and James, Les and others)
if your wall already uses lime mortar I personally would stick to pure lime mortar as I have seen real life examples and somewhere on the net where the use of cement in mortar has led to VERY serious degradation of the surrounding material do to the impervious nature of cement retaining all of the moisture in the brick/stone leading to the material basically just rotting away... will see if I can find a link to some on the net...
the setting time is not too much to worry about really... the original builders built the building with it and it was fine and is still standing... the long setting time refers more to the complete set when the full chemical process has taken place... I could easily walk on my paving the next day with no problem and the render could be touched... altho could scratch it for a couple of weeks but now it like stone...
infact when laying bricks... the mortar sets very firm within minutes it seems but remains damp and fragile only if knocked until the next day or so...
I was hesitant at first until I kept on reminding myself that in the order of 3 - 4000 years of continuous use is not too bad a track record in the use of lime mortar... how long has portland cement been around... 150 yrs and only about 70 to any scale... sort of speaks for itself really
same issue with mud brick and pise... the critics say it is not strong enough to stand up to the ravages of time, weather etc etc... but there are examples that are 2000 years old still standing and still in use... what is important is HOW it is used and the detailing used in it's use... not the material itself
the uptake of cement has more to do with politics and business and money rather than the inadequacies of the materials themselves... cement enabled faster construction of thinner walled building techniques which meant that the builder could be in and out of a site quicker and with less of a cost to him in materials and labour... the typical trend with all of the 20th cent processes... seems to have been the dawn of the age of the accountant, and the bottom dollar, in all decision making processes... environmental and people issues just did not register at all... obviously there were other issues at play as well... the Great Depression... the lack of materials after the 2 big wars... etc etc... but the bottom dollar approach had a very big part to play in it
this whole attitude towards cost and the lack of consideration for the environment plays throughout so many areas... paint manufacture, cabinetry etc... where big business dominates the initiation of processes that are followed... I remember reading a long time ago about a paint company employee going to one of the Shaker communities and in a "display" house sneaking a sample of the paint from the walls only to go back to the lab and reverse engineer the samples to work out the original recipes and then patent them... not for the betterment of mankind and building practices in general... but to shelf the recipe so no one could ever use it commercially... as it lasted FAR TOOOOOO LONG !!!! hence less dollars for the business community... whereas these recipes used originally were not held in monopoly but freely available for all
this is not about any luddite principles at work... just a respect for the environment and people...
there is my soapbox for the day... I can see this is going to be one of those days at work... I can just see it...
but it would be good to have some knowledge chime in on the use of pure lime mortar use in wood ovens
cheers
Trevor
Hi Dutch (and James, Les and others)
if your wall already uses lime mortar I personally would stick to pure lime mortar as I have seen real life examples and somewhere on the net where the use of cement in mortar has led to VERY serious degradation of the surrounding material do to the impervious nature of cement retaining all of the moisture in the brick/stone leading to the material basically just rotting away... will see if I can find a link to some on the net...
the setting time is not too much to worry about really... the original builders built the building with it and it was fine and is still standing... the long setting time refers more to the complete set when the full chemical process has taken place... I could easily walk on my paving the next day with no problem and the render could be touched... altho could scratch it for a couple of weeks but now it like stone...
infact when laying bricks... the mortar sets very firm within minutes it seems but remains damp and fragile only if knocked until the next day or so...
I was hesitant at first until I kept on reminding myself that in the order of 3 - 4000 years of continuous use is not too bad a track record in the use of lime mortar... how long has portland cement been around... 150 yrs and only about 70 to any scale... sort of speaks for itself really
same issue with mud brick and pise... the critics say it is not strong enough to stand up to the ravages of time, weather etc etc... but there are examples that are 2000 years old still standing and still in use... what is important is HOW it is used and the detailing used in it's use... not the material itself
the uptake of cement has more to do with politics and business and money rather than the inadequacies of the materials themselves... cement enabled faster construction of thinner walled building techniques which meant that the builder could be in and out of a site quicker and with less of a cost to him in materials and labour... the typical trend with all of the 20th cent processes... seems to have been the dawn of the age of the accountant, and the bottom dollar, in all decision making processes... environmental and people issues just did not register at all... obviously there were other issues at play as well... the Great Depression... the lack of materials after the 2 big wars... etc etc... but the bottom dollar approach had a very big part to play in it
this whole attitude towards cost and the lack of consideration for the environment plays throughout so many areas... paint manufacture, cabinetry etc... where big business dominates the initiation of processes that are followed... I remember reading a long time ago about a paint company employee going to one of the Shaker communities and in a "display" house sneaking a sample of the paint from the walls only to go back to the lab and reverse engineer the samples to work out the original recipes and then patent them... not for the betterment of mankind and building practices in general... but to shelf the recipe so no one could ever use it commercially... as it lasted FAR TOOOOOO LONG !!!! hence less dollars for the business community... whereas these recipes used originally were not held in monopoly but freely available for all
this is not about any luddite principles at work... just a respect for the environment and people...
there is my soapbox for the day... I can see this is going to be one of those days at work... I can just see it...
but it would be good to have some knowledge chime in on the use of pure lime mortar use in wood ovens
cheers
Trevor
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