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Lill Dave, your post is about two months too late and I'm not sure very relevant. Save some money? I'm only in this thing just over $800 and that includes buying the tile saw, cement mixer and various tools as well as all the materials needed to finish it. I'm not sure how building a dome instead of a vault would make it any cheaper. And as for the Pompeii being "far better" I think the jury is still out on that one. Better maybe, but not by far. Last week I cooked four absolutely perfect loaves of bread followed by several dozen incredibly delicious cookies and an amazing roast and baked potatoes the week before. I'm not sure a Pompeii would have made any improvements. Still, I might be building another oven for my daughter so who knows, if someone can convince me that the dome is so much better, I just might give it a try.
If you still have some of those tapered bricks you should build another vault for your daughter, there is no difference in performance from a dome or vault that I can see from the posts Ive read on here.
Fire goes in, bricks get hot.
The forum is of course dome biased.
The English language was invented by people who couldnt spell.
I have a question. At what temperature does the soot burn off? I've read that when the dome goes white the floor is 900 degrees. Is this correct? I'm too cheap to buy an infrared thermometer and am just curious what the approx temp of my oven is.
Dear clofgreen, sorry about the two months late I guss I didn't do my home work.My comment about the pompii is my first oven was the style yours is , it works fine but I like my pompii a little better. Good luck on the next oven whatever style.
No prob Lill Dave. My posts tend to be rather long winded.
To celebrate the first snow we've had in over a month I fired up the oven, invited family and cooked pizza, bread and brownies. Mm mm good! Here's a sampling.
But as good as the food was, the best part of the day was seeing my grandson again. Not to brag but he's a real cutie.
Finally got back to building the WFO. Here's a progress image.
Being my first attempt at laying brick I've made a bunch of mistakes not the least of which is letting the smeared mortar cure onto the brick. I've read a number of posts stating the pros and cons of using muriatic acid. Anyone want to weigh in on the subject? I'd like to hear your experience/opinion.
Nice job with the bricks...your lack of experience doesn't show. I used a form of muriatic acid, though supposedly gentler. I got it at Ace. It had to be cut with water, and foamed a bit when applied. I still needed to wire brush the more difficult areas, but the stuff worked and cleaned my bricks (I did wear gloves and eye protection just in case). Rinse them off after cleaning to dilute any remaining acid, though most of it should react with the mortar and neutralize. The moral of the (my) story was clean the bricks after they have set, but before the mortar is completely cured.
Keep up the good work
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