Re: Oven on wheels
Thanks, mate.
I'm not too concerned. I recognize that something has to give when things expand and contract a lot. I'm used to looking at furnace and kiln re-lines that cost hundreds of thousands of dollars, and still drop bricks and chunks of refractory out of the liners the first time we fire them up. That's with embedded thermo-couples, rigorously monitored curing schedules, the lot, and we bring them to temperature and keep them there, not go up and down like a wood oven does.
So, I'm more amazed how well homebuilt brick ovens hold together, rather than alarmed at minor cracking.
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I'm not too concerned. I recognize that something has to give when things expand and contract a lot. I'm used to looking at furnace and kiln re-lines that cost hundreds of thousands of dollars, and still drop bricks and chunks of refractory out of the liners the first time we fire them up. That's with embedded thermo-couples, rigorously monitored curing schedules, the lot, and we bring them to temperature and keep them there, not go up and down like a wood oven does.
So, I'm more amazed how well homebuilt brick ovens hold together, rather than alarmed at minor cracking.
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