... I fill them with dry mortar and then pour the water over it?
The problem is (and nobody - I stress - nobody! - didn't tell me that all the bricks have different size and it's much more better to spend the whole day by drinking beer instead of...) that finally I've got some gaps between bricks pretty big - around 3-4 mm (not only the size of bricks differs, but they are also not strict parallelepiped, so it was challenging, by the way, stamp on one side of each brick doesn't allow to flip it over! damn bricks!!!).
And now I'm thinking of using dry mortar to fix that (it will also, I guess, give to masonry additional strength). Is is good or I'd better leave the gaps and allow them to be filled by ash?
I've set up the with mortar of fireclay and chamotte, no concrete at all. Is it OK?
The problem is (and nobody - I stress - nobody! - didn't tell me that all the bricks have different size and it's much more better to spend the whole day by drinking beer instead of...) that finally I've got some gaps between bricks pretty big - around 3-4 mm (not only the size of bricks differs, but they are also not strict parallelepiped, so it was challenging, by the way, stamp on one side of each brick doesn't allow to flip it over! damn bricks!!!).
And now I'm thinking of using dry mortar to fix that (it will also, I guess, give to masonry additional strength). Is is good or I'd better leave the gaps and allow them to be filled by ash?
I've set up the with mortar of fireclay and chamotte, no concrete at all. Is it OK?
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