Hello members of this forum.
I am creating this post to document my own build and to get input and tips before making more mistakes!
My current challenges are: I am a total newbie with masonry work. I cast the foundation not level. It slopes down approximately 2cm or almost 1 inch from back to front. I thought I could easily remedy this in building the wall of the stand by having more mortar between the bricks as I moved from back to front of the stand. But it seems I won't be able to completely fix this - also because I partly use reclaimed and old blocks I've scavenged here and there, so it really is becoming a bit of a puzzle to fit it together plumb and solid.
I hope that I will be able to solve this 'level problem' when forming and casting the top of the stand. Additionally, since the stand is dug into the ground due to the rather crass slope I am building on I am considering to grout/pour concrete into all the block cells on the back of the stand - I also buttress with rebar every 30-40 cm. In comparison I only pour and rebar every 50-60cm across the sides.
Another issue: I plan to have the stand be 4 rows of blocks. The rebar I cut is about 40cm too long at the top. Would it make sense to try and bend the excess rebar to 90 degrees to create a reinforcing link between wall and top of the stand, so that they become covered in the concrete of the top when poured? Or would bending the cast vertical rebar be too much force for the wall and would it be easier to just cut the excess rebar and throw it into the form to create strength that way?
I haven't begun to seriously consider the actual oven yet. I have about 77 firebricks (from my father in law). Clearly that won't be enough for a brick dome. And fire bricks in Japan cost at least 2 dollars a piece. So to save on cost (and since I don't have any proven skills in brick laying), probably the safest and cheapest way is going to go for a cast dome. The size of my stand will be roughly 140cm by 160cm. Given that I have this area to put a dome, archway, and insulate the whole thing, what size of dome would I be looking to fit onto there? I been thinking of around 75-80cm diameter oven dome. Is that a realistic size given the overall space limitations I have, when needing several payers of insulating mortar/insulating blanket etc?
Finally, to create an insulating space on on the top of the stand, I am thinking to pour first 3cm of concrete reinforced with rebar. On top of that, maybe around 8-10cm of perlcrete mix in the middle roughly to the size of the dome and surrounded by normal concrete. Will that be sufficient insulation? If not, I've also found in the local hardware store that they sell 1cm thick fireproof aluminum silicate plates. I could cut and layer a few (3-4cm) of such plates under the perlcrete. It would make the perlcrete less thick, but maybe that is a more effective insulation than the perlcrete on its own?
I am attaching some picture evidence of the progress in this build. You can see some of the challenges and considerations I mention in these photos. Any inputs or tips would be super welcomed, since this is a pretty challenging but also fun project!
Greetings from Japan
I am creating this post to document my own build and to get input and tips before making more mistakes!
My current challenges are: I am a total newbie with masonry work. I cast the foundation not level. It slopes down approximately 2cm or almost 1 inch from back to front. I thought I could easily remedy this in building the wall of the stand by having more mortar between the bricks as I moved from back to front of the stand. But it seems I won't be able to completely fix this - also because I partly use reclaimed and old blocks I've scavenged here and there, so it really is becoming a bit of a puzzle to fit it together plumb and solid.
I hope that I will be able to solve this 'level problem' when forming and casting the top of the stand. Additionally, since the stand is dug into the ground due to the rather crass slope I am building on I am considering to grout/pour concrete into all the block cells on the back of the stand - I also buttress with rebar every 30-40 cm. In comparison I only pour and rebar every 50-60cm across the sides.
Another issue: I plan to have the stand be 4 rows of blocks. The rebar I cut is about 40cm too long at the top. Would it make sense to try and bend the excess rebar to 90 degrees to create a reinforcing link between wall and top of the stand, so that they become covered in the concrete of the top when poured? Or would bending the cast vertical rebar be too much force for the wall and would it be easier to just cut the excess rebar and throw it into the form to create strength that way?
I haven't begun to seriously consider the actual oven yet. I have about 77 firebricks (from my father in law). Clearly that won't be enough for a brick dome. And fire bricks in Japan cost at least 2 dollars a piece. So to save on cost (and since I don't have any proven skills in brick laying), probably the safest and cheapest way is going to go for a cast dome. The size of my stand will be roughly 140cm by 160cm. Given that I have this area to put a dome, archway, and insulate the whole thing, what size of dome would I be looking to fit onto there? I been thinking of around 75-80cm diameter oven dome. Is that a realistic size given the overall space limitations I have, when needing several payers of insulating mortar/insulating blanket etc?
Finally, to create an insulating space on on the top of the stand, I am thinking to pour first 3cm of concrete reinforced with rebar. On top of that, maybe around 8-10cm of perlcrete mix in the middle roughly to the size of the dome and surrounded by normal concrete. Will that be sufficient insulation? If not, I've also found in the local hardware store that they sell 1cm thick fireproof aluminum silicate plates. I could cut and layer a few (3-4cm) of such plates under the perlcrete. It would make the perlcrete less thick, but maybe that is a more effective insulation than the perlcrete on its own?
I am attaching some picture evidence of the progress in this build. You can see some of the challenges and considerations I mention in these photos. Any inputs or tips would be super welcomed, since this is a pretty challenging but also fun project!
Greetings from Japan
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