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worked on the enclosure yesterday and today, below are 3 pics.
- put some wire mesh over the blanket to help keep it in place.
- built metal rafters to span the enclosure
- enclosure with metal rafters and cross supports
overall the enclosure is vey sturdy and I'm happy the way it turned out.
Re: 36" oven in Colorado Springs (loose vermiculite)
since I got the vermiculite cheap ($10 for a 4 cu ft bag), I got 5 bags and it basically filled the entire closure, good calculations (estimations) I guess.
day 1 = pizza
day 2 = ribs
day 3 = cinnamon rolls
day 4 = roast
Ok, just guessing there, but I'll let everyone know the heat profile as the days go on.
Switch the ribs and roast or do them both on day 4 or 5, day two could be whole turkey or chicken after some nice crusty bread. Casseroles in cast iron also do well on day 2, steaks or fish with a refresh to the coals on a Tuscan grill are also a day 2 treat.
Re: 36" oven in Colorado Springs (4th burn - with question)
A little more progress.
1st and 2nd burns were just with sterno flames (2, then 4), made it to about 150deg and 180 deg. 3rd burn (no pics) was with real wood and made it to about 250deg.
4th burn was tonight, a little more wood and made it to about 350 deg. Think I'm on a good glide path. First pic is the fire and third pic includes the flue I placed on top. Flue isn't cemented in yet, just wanted it there to see how it drew (pretty good) and have the chimney cap on just in case.
Question for the experts. The 2nd pic highlights a couple of the bricks (circled in black) in the vent area, which shows result after burn #3. Why are the highlighted bricks so much darker than the other ones? Is it oxidation? heat reside?
probably smart not to run natural gas to the grill. I spent hundreds of dollars having pipe run (it $$ a foot and you can't buy it unless you have a license) and the BBQ doesn't get as hot as propane does. Fortunately, I have a pizza oven right next to it that gets plenty hot!
On your natural gas BBQ did you get the orifice changed or drilled out for natural gas? I actually work for a natural gas company and yes propane burns hotter hence smaller orifice holes, natural gas require larger orifices to get the same BTU content. Most BBQs come with propane orifices stock. Just a thought.
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