Hey Everybody~ I'm preparing to build a steel dome wood-fired oven on a trailer using a used propane end cap...40" (thanks Wiley ).
One of the issues I am trying to consider is heat loss from the steel dome connected to a metal support frame (base). I want to securely attach the steel dome to a base...at first I was thinking of welding the dome to a steel plate laid across the base and insulating underneath (vermiculite concrete and insulating board) and on top of the steel plate, but I think the heat will be drawn from the oven using this method? Or, I could build a steel base with a few welded attachment points recessed within the base frame and buried in light-weight concrete or vermiculite-concrete?
The propane tank I have is still intact and I was thinking I might cut it leaving about 6" or so below the seam where the hemispherical end cap is welded to the cylinder and use that space for a double fire brick oven floor and insulating board (including 2" or so of the dome/cylinder walls buried in the base vermcrete)...the seam would be flush with the top of the oven floor.
I'm still trying to figure it all out...but I have the propane tank, a 5' x 10' single axle (3000#) trailer. Forno Bravo has the ref-mix, insulating board, and ceramic blanket insulation, and I can locally source the fire-brick.
The idea is to use the Forno Bravo ref-mix (4" or so) over the steel dome, followed by ceramic insulating blankets and then stucco.
Any ideas to think this through would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Bob
One of the issues I am trying to consider is heat loss from the steel dome connected to a metal support frame (base). I want to securely attach the steel dome to a base...at first I was thinking of welding the dome to a steel plate laid across the base and insulating underneath (vermiculite concrete and insulating board) and on top of the steel plate, but I think the heat will be drawn from the oven using this method? Or, I could build a steel base with a few welded attachment points recessed within the base frame and buried in light-weight concrete or vermiculite-concrete?
The propane tank I have is still intact and I was thinking I might cut it leaving about 6" or so below the seam where the hemispherical end cap is welded to the cylinder and use that space for a double fire brick oven floor and insulating board (including 2" or so of the dome/cylinder walls buried in the base vermcrete)...the seam would be flush with the top of the oven floor.
I'm still trying to figure it all out...but I have the propane tank, a 5' x 10' single axle (3000#) trailer. Forno Bravo has the ref-mix, insulating board, and ceramic blanket insulation, and I can locally source the fire-brick.
The idea is to use the Forno Bravo ref-mix (4" or so) over the steel dome, followed by ceramic insulating blankets and then stucco.
Any ideas to think this through would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Bob
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