Re: Advice on pouring the hearth
cecelia
Portland based concrete and vermiculete needs lots of water to cure. When mixing the concrete, use as little water as possible - just enough to make it workable. Then, starting about six hours after the pour, keep it damp continually for at least six days. You can't add too much water at this time. (The people who cast structural bridge girders often submerse the entire girder in a water filled trench for three weeks.) Excess moisture will be driven out later during the firing process once the oven is built.
Most of the home project concrete failures I have seen are the result of not providing continual moisture during the initial curing.
The vermiculete will be cured enough after a couple of days to start laying the hearth and building the dome.
cecelia
Portland based concrete and vermiculete needs lots of water to cure. When mixing the concrete, use as little water as possible - just enough to make it workable. Then, starting about six hours after the pour, keep it damp continually for at least six days. You can't add too much water at this time. (The people who cast structural bridge girders often submerse the entire girder in a water filled trench for three weeks.) Excess moisture will be driven out later during the firing process once the oven is built.
Most of the home project concrete failures I have seen are the result of not providing continual moisture during the initial curing.
The vermiculete will be cured enough after a couple of days to start laying the hearth and building the dome.
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