Who has used the calcium aluminate mortar (instead of the fireclay mortar)?
If yes, what was your set up time during construction?
Was the mortar very tempermental in high temp situations?
If yes, what was your set up time during construction?
Was the mortar very tempermental in high temp situations?
From the pompeii oven plans V2.0
Here is the recipe for fire clay mortar, where you measure by volume (use a bucket or shovel to measure):
1 part portland
3 parts sand
1 part lime
1 part fire clay
In between Refrax and fire clay/Portland cement mortar, you can make your own aluminate mortar. It is hard to work with, as calcium aluminate can be challenging. If you get the mix, or water wrong, it won't set correctly. It partially sets very quickly, and you cannot re-hydrate it, so you have to mix it and use it in small batches. Still, if you are trying to save money and want/need the heat resilience, heat conductivity and longevity of a true aluminate mortar, it works.
1 part calcium aluminate
3 parts sand
1 part lime
1 part fire clay
-James
__________________
Here is the recipe for fire clay mortar, where you measure by volume (use a bucket or shovel to measure):
1 part portland
3 parts sand
1 part lime
1 part fire clay
In between Refrax and fire clay/Portland cement mortar, you can make your own aluminate mortar. It is hard to work with, as calcium aluminate can be challenging. If you get the mix, or water wrong, it won't set correctly. It partially sets very quickly, and you cannot re-hydrate it, so you have to mix it and use it in small batches. Still, if you are trying to save money and want/need the heat resilience, heat conductivity and longevity of a true aluminate mortar, it works.
1 part calcium aluminate
3 parts sand
1 part lime
1 part fire clay
-James
__________________
From FB.com
The composition and density of an oven's thermal material is also important. Alumina and silica are two materials that have both high heat conductivity and high heat holding capability, and when used with a calcium aluminate binder (not Portland cement), they provide excellent cooking and longevity characteristics. An oven rich in these materials will heat up more quickly, hold heat longer and last much longer than an oven made from natural clay.
The composition and density of an oven's thermal material is also important. Alumina and silica are two materials that have both high heat conductivity and high heat holding capability, and when used with a calcium aluminate binder (not Portland cement), they provide excellent cooking and longevity characteristics. An oven rich in these materials will heat up more quickly, hold heat longer and last much longer than an oven made from natural clay.
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