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Yea your right it would support the flue better (I was just talking about my previous plans), I am wondering if it will create a problem with heating up the outer red brick enclosure (bad heat break).
Ok, I see. Perhaps a small piece of blanket where the flue almost touches the bricks would be a good solution as the blanket is a better insulator and the space is really thin.
It's effectiveness is reduced by the amount of cement added and if damp. A rough rule of thumb is that you need double the thickness to achieve the same insulating value as blanket. It's advantage is that it is not classed as carcinogenic like fibre blanket.
I could add the Vermicucrete all over except between the front small gap, would that help? I have three boxes of fire blanket, that should be plenty do what ever I want or need to do.
I could add the Vermicucrete all over except between the front small gap, would that help? I have three boxes of fire blanket, that should be plenty do what ever I want or need to do.
I have been making fires over the past weeks, making each one bigger than the next. I should of read that curing fire thread all the way though before I started because those first 2 fires probably didn't do anything. As my fires got bigger the heat did what I was afraid it was going to do to the brick in the front (I think I knew when I was trying to put the insulation in-between the red brick and the flue). I got a small crack starting from the outer arch up though the red brick. Obviously as the arch got hot and expanded it lifted the red brick. The crack is only visible on the outside of the arch (on the fire brick), it does not go into the dome.
-On a good note, I don't have any other cracks (knock on wood) inside the dome.
- The dome is just starting to clear. I haven't gotten it to totally clear just yet, the weather is not cooperating. The last picture is of the top clearing.
- My plan was to get the dome to completely clear before I tried to fix the crack. (If that is even possible). The crack gets slightly bigger when it gets hot (no big surprise there).
One side getting hot and expanding the other side cold, not good. This is often the cause of cracks. My first oven developed a crack in the firebrick floor at the entry. This brick never got really hot like the floor bricks in the centre, but being cold at the front and hotter where it was nearer the inside of the oven was probably the cause. If you heat refractory material unevenly there will be uneven expansion, particularly when the rate of temp rise (300 C/hr) is so rapid.
I should have explained that my first oven had no entry (centre flue for saving space and simplicity) so the floor brick was half in the oven and half out.
Last edited by david s; 11-22-2011, 01:41 PM.
Reason: Thought of more
I am less worried about the fire brick part of the crack (it is so small). The crack in the red brick Just looks bad and it makes a way for water to get in when it rains.
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