Re: Filling joints in hearth slab?
Hello Richc:
Well it looks like your castings are a bit off. If they are not off by orientation, like you have a vertical joint where it should actually be a base joint... then you are going to do some serious scribing to make them fit.
To do this, you need to get your hands on something that will cut the refractory cleanly so that you can make the necessary adjustments. A small angle grinder with a diamond blade, for cutting and maybe a cup type diamond leveling cutter. Actually the same cutter that you would use for cutting brick for a hand held grinder.
How I would tackle this would to first decide which are the most critical seams. To me, I would want the center of the top of he dome to be in perfect alignment. I think that you need to use some type of hydraulic jack and some wooden blocks to protect your casting. The top wooden block should be able to touch all three pieces of your dome.
You must raise the center enough so that it becomes all the same height. In doing this, your vertical seams should come into alignment. Once that you have accomplished this, You will need to scribe the bottom of the dome sections so that you will eliminate any dome to hearth spaces.
My term scribing is just marking with something that is the thickness of the largest gap and cut that excess off all offending pieces. You should be able to do this so that --I don't know the currency of Ireland??? Maybe it is the British Pound??? Anyway, you should be able to make it tight enough that one of your paper currencies cannot easily slide between the joints.
This is something that you can do--and something that must be done to get these castings into alignment. If you don't, you are just asking for problems down the road.
You want to look inside your oven and see a nice smooth surface. Too bad the company that supplied the castings has such a poor quality control department!
Another little bit of advice--try not to set schedules when things must be completed by. With these oven builds, something always comes up --adding schedules to a hobby just makes for a lot of useless stress! Worrying never accomplishes anything except "the actual act of worrying"! Enjoy your hobby!
Another "old guy" bit of advice- if you don't love going to work at your regular job, change jobs --so that you do! You have to work all your life anyway so why not enjoy what you do!
I'm really lucky...I consider my job as my hobby, not that I have a lot of money and can be independent but because I enjoy looking forward to every moment I spend doing the little projects that I do--AND--someone else is willing to pay me for what I do! Best of both worlds!! Even though the pay is small, the rewards are great!
To get back on subject--Use the refractory mortar sparingly! Do not allow it to get onto your hearth surface or any area that would make a bond between the dome and hearth. It just fills the fine cracks, It can be plastered over the outside of the dome at the joints and feathered out. The joints will crack again there anyway but it helps to keep the cracks very small!
What is the deal with the landing? Do you have another cast section that forms the landing and chimney transition? Do you have any sales literature that shows a completed oven by this company?
Hello Richc:
Well it looks like your castings are a bit off. If they are not off by orientation, like you have a vertical joint where it should actually be a base joint... then you are going to do some serious scribing to make them fit.
To do this, you need to get your hands on something that will cut the refractory cleanly so that you can make the necessary adjustments. A small angle grinder with a diamond blade, for cutting and maybe a cup type diamond leveling cutter. Actually the same cutter that you would use for cutting brick for a hand held grinder.
How I would tackle this would to first decide which are the most critical seams. To me, I would want the center of the top of he dome to be in perfect alignment. I think that you need to use some type of hydraulic jack and some wooden blocks to protect your casting. The top wooden block should be able to touch all three pieces of your dome.
You must raise the center enough so that it becomes all the same height. In doing this, your vertical seams should come into alignment. Once that you have accomplished this, You will need to scribe the bottom of the dome sections so that you will eliminate any dome to hearth spaces.
My term scribing is just marking with something that is the thickness of the largest gap and cut that excess off all offending pieces. You should be able to do this so that --I don't know the currency of Ireland??? Maybe it is the British Pound??? Anyway, you should be able to make it tight enough that one of your paper currencies cannot easily slide between the joints.
This is something that you can do--and something that must be done to get these castings into alignment. If you don't, you are just asking for problems down the road.
You want to look inside your oven and see a nice smooth surface. Too bad the company that supplied the castings has such a poor quality control department!
Another little bit of advice--try not to set schedules when things must be completed by. With these oven builds, something always comes up --adding schedules to a hobby just makes for a lot of useless stress! Worrying never accomplishes anything except "the actual act of worrying"! Enjoy your hobby!
Another "old guy" bit of advice- if you don't love going to work at your regular job, change jobs --so that you do! You have to work all your life anyway so why not enjoy what you do!
I'm really lucky...I consider my job as my hobby, not that I have a lot of money and can be independent but because I enjoy looking forward to every moment I spend doing the little projects that I do--AND--someone else is willing to pay me for what I do! Best of both worlds!! Even though the pay is small, the rewards are great!
To get back on subject--Use the refractory mortar sparingly! Do not allow it to get onto your hearth surface or any area that would make a bond between the dome and hearth. It just fills the fine cracks, It can be plastered over the outside of the dome at the joints and feathered out. The joints will crack again there anyway but it helps to keep the cracks very small!
What is the deal with the landing? Do you have another cast section that forms the landing and chimney transition? Do you have any sales literature that shows a completed oven by this company?
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