Re: External crack
Have to respectfully disagree with the first sentence. There is a fairly significant difference in the coefficients of expansion between masonry and steel. The problem beomes magnified as the size of the pieces increase in size as I found out earlier this year. I had built the oyster cooker side of the oven complex with a metal angle-iron framework surrounded by brickwork and forgot to leave any expansion space. The longest dimension of the metal was about 45 inches so that seemingly little difference between the two materials gets porpotionally larger. The oyster cooker only gets up into the low 600's degrees F, yet the metal expansion was enough to open up a 3/4 inch crack in the brickwork.
Also, think a lot of the reason for the airspace between the inner and outer flue is to shield the inner flue from exposure to colder air, which causes thermal cracking...the air in between reachs some happy medium temp and acts as an insulator. Last year's dry-stack version of the oyster cooker had a chimney made from a couple of flue tiles stacked up and held in place by a little bit of wire and luck (testing the design)...The flues were exposed directly to the air temp and every one of the flues cracked big time.
Have any of you brickwork domers ever tried a final coating of fiberglass reinforced concrete? I use it on all my exteriors now and don't see any problems from thermal expansion so It must have enough flex in it.
Originally posted by Xabia Jim
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Also, think a lot of the reason for the airspace between the inner and outer flue is to shield the inner flue from exposure to colder air, which causes thermal cracking...the air in between reachs some happy medium temp and acts as an insulator. Last year's dry-stack version of the oyster cooker had a chimney made from a couple of flue tiles stacked up and held in place by a little bit of wire and luck (testing the design)...The flues were exposed directly to the air temp and every one of the flues cracked big time.
Have any of you brickwork domers ever tried a final coating of fiberglass reinforced concrete? I use it on all my exteriors now and don't see any problems from thermal expansion so It must have enough flex in it.
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