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My 40" Inch pizza oven in Florida

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  • Re: My 40" Inch pizza oven in Florida

    Originally posted by kbartman View Post
    What is CF? I edited the post I checked the spec sheet mine is Alumina Silicate
    board.........I'm confused
    I have been using that as a quick way to designate standard Ceramic Fiber board from what I have been calling biosoluble.

    This is from the Skyline site:

    Standard ceramic fiber board is made of aluminum silicate ceramic fibers
    with a small amount of organic binders. Bio-soluble board is made of
    calcium/magnesium silicate fibers with a small amount of organic
    binders.

    Probably bad labeling on my part. Sorry for confusion. Bruce
    Last edited by Bec1208; 04-25-2013, 11:35 PM. Reason: Added quote to improve clarity
    Link to my build here:
    http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/f6/3...lly-19181.html

    Check out my pictures here:

    Selected pictures of the build.

    https://picasaweb.google.com/1168565...g&noredirect=1





    sigpic “In theory, theory and practice are the same. In practice, they are not.” ― Albert Einstein

    Comment


    • Re: My 40" Inch pizza oven in Florida

      Bruce,
      No apologies necessary. I'm the one that stays confused and have been known to confuse others with my confusion here is a quote from brickie to consider.
      Originally posted by brickie in oz View Post
      Sorry, no warm fuzzy feelings to offer.

      The FB board means Forno Bravo board which is actually a Calcium Silicate board and doesnt compress nearly as much as Ceramic Fibre board.
      Ceramic Fibre board will compress to nearly nothing with enough weight and time.

      Just as well I saw that you had problems before you got too far.
      I know its a bummer but better to rebuild it now than in 2 months time.
      Respectfully,

      KB

      My build
      Oven Pics (album under construction)

      Comment


      • Re: My 40" Inch pizza oven in Florida

        You can see my confusion. I value Brickie's and Forno Bravo's opinion. Talking with the entire local supplier?s even added more confusion. Cost was one of the main reason but also the reason I used the FB board, I felt the FB plans were a proven design.
        Respectfully,

        KB

        My build
        Oven Pics (album under construction)

        Comment


        • Re: My 40" Inch pizza oven in Florida

          Originally posted by brickie in oz View Post
          Ceramic Fibre board will compress to nearly nothing with enough weight and time.
          Al, of course with enough weight and time a lump of coal becomes a diamond.
          Bruce
          Link to my build here:
          http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/f6/3...lly-19181.html

          Check out my pictures here:

          Selected pictures of the build.

          https://picasaweb.google.com/1168565...g&noredirect=1





          sigpic “In theory, theory and practice are the same. In practice, they are not.” ― Albert Einstein

          Comment


          • Re: My 40" Inch pizza oven in Florida

            Originally posted by kbartman View Post
            Bruce,
            Nice floor moving right along. Consider the sanding I did on my floor I?m really pleased with how my turned out.
            Agree that your floor looks very good, could you describe your technique (e.g., type of sander used ect...), either on this thread or on yours? Thanks, Bruce
            Link to my build here:
            http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/f6/3...lly-19181.html

            Check out my pictures here:

            Selected pictures of the build.

            https://picasaweb.google.com/1168565...g&noredirect=1





            sigpic “In theory, theory and practice are the same. In practice, they are not.” ― Albert Einstein

            Comment


            • Re: My 40" Inch pizza oven in Florida

              Originally posted by kbartman View Post
              Al,
              I'll take some pics when I get home this morning. The over all compression of the board seems ok with three courses set. A slight indention of maybe 1/8". My biggest concern was the bricks rockin on the floor. The sand seems to have solve this. Placing a brick on the insulation and placing pressure evenly down very little compression, as the pressure is applied unevenly or in the corner the brick, would rock slightly. This seems ok and makes sense the board isn't rock hard. Small surface area of the corners would cause more deflection. I may have softened the top layer a little around the joints trying to even them up. All the material is still there just a little softer do to my stupidy. I feel it should all compress to the original state after the bricks are set. With the floor tightly locked In place it shoud move as one large surface area and evenly compress the board to spec. We could probaly firgure that out. If I remember correctly I think the compression .5 Mpa. Not sure how to figure that.
              I apparently skipped over this post and just caught it when I looked to see if you had described sanding the floor. I agree with your reasoning.

              There are numerous sites on the web that will convert MPa to psi (.5 MPa converts to 72.52 psi). If you want to try an experiment, you could stack 20 or more bricks on an area of the board you plan to cut off. Based on 5 lbs per brick, that would be 100 lbs on an 9" x 4" surface. The psi would be 100/36=2.78 psi. Any compression should be small and uniform.

              As you pointed out lots of builds have used fb (and other) boards and I have not seen a single report of failure related to the board. Either it works or James is running one hell of a scam.
              Link to my build here:
              http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/f6/3...lly-19181.html

              Check out my pictures here:

              Selected pictures of the build.

              https://picasaweb.google.com/1168565...g&noredirect=1





              sigpic “In theory, theory and practice are the same. In practice, they are not.” ― Albert Einstein

              Comment


              • Re: My 40" Inch pizza oven in Florida

                Originally posted by Bec1208 View Post
                Agree that your floor looks very good, could you describe your technique (e.g., type of sander used ect...), either on this thread or on yours? Thanks, Bruce
                Originally posted by kbartman View Post
                I made so progress since my big scare on Friday. After the floor was set and first course lay I found some rocking in floor, which I did not like. Thinking about a tear down at this point, I remembered briefly reading a thread on some putting sand inside the dome for support and someone else sanding the floor. Without any further reading on the subject, I thought to myself, why in the world would some do that? I only envisioned a gritty pizza. ??....... I decide to try a little sand on the floor.
                Bruce,
                No sander involved, just play sand purchased at the local home improvement store. The fire brick and substrate is not perfect has some imperfections causing misalignments and unevenness. Remembering brick pavers and the sanding between the joints I thought the sand would do the same for the floor. The sand flows, thanks to gravity and the spray bottle or water hose on the pavers ( I would not recommend a water hose on the oven floor do to insulation becoming saturated) to fill all the imperfections. As the sand flows downward to fill all imperfection the bricks become tightly locked together. I believe the brick and sand on substrate will behave as one unit with gravity to keep the floor level. As I worked the sand into the joints and rocked the brick to levelness I paid more attention to the corners off the herring bone pattern that the pizza peel would chip easily. I made sure they were below the 45 degree angle of the herring bone pattern to the oven door of adjacent bricks. I started with a rubber mallet to get the sand into the joints, and then tried the spray bottle. It worked wonders to allow the sand to disappear into the voids. Thinking the hammering of the rubber mallet and too much sand could cause to much outward expansion (too much could cause the bricks to expand to the oven walls causing my expansion joint disappear or fail. I was carful around the edges and figure ash would complete the job. As far as gritty pizza I figure a vacuum cleaner to remove just enough sand and ash would fill the left voids and prevent the gritty pizza.
                Respectfully,

                KB

                My build
                Oven Pics (album under construction)

                Comment


                • Re: My 40" Inch pizza oven in Florida

                  Originally posted by Bec1208 View Post
                  I apparently skipped over this post and just caught it when I looked to see if you had described sanding the floor. I agree with your reasoning.

                  There are numerous sites on the web that will convert MPa to psi (.5 MPa converts to 72.52 psi). If you want to try an experiment, you could stack 20 or more bricks on an area of the board you plan to cut off. Based on 5 lbs per brick, that would be 100 lbs on an 9" x 4" surface. The psi would be 100/36=2.78 psi. Any compression should be small and uniform.

                  As you pointed out lots of builds have used fb (and other) boards and I have not seen a single report of failure related to the board. Either it works or James is running one hell of a scam.
                  Ok just notice after composing hope the additional description help.
                  Respectfully,

                  KB

                  My build
                  Oven Pics (album under construction)

                  Comment


                  • Re: My 40" Inch pizza oven in Florida

                    Originally posted by kbartman View Post
                    PS. Can you see the three y's neatly staggered in the text of the post? I planned thator is it just stipidity?................. I hope I have the same luck staggering my course joints, LOL
                    Ok my bad it changes per computer monitor. It was neat to see the three y's neatly staggered.
                    Last edited by kbartman; 04-26-2013, 01:41 PM. Reason: spelling
                    Respectfully,

                    KB

                    My build
                    Oven Pics (album under construction)

                    Comment


                    • Re: My 40" Inch pizza oven in Florida

                      Originally posted by kbartman View Post
                      Bruce,
                      No sander involved, just play sand purchased at the local home improvement store.
                      Gives new meaning to sanding.

                      Just finished laying out bricks on the insulation. Taking a break now. Thanks for the reply. Bruce
                      Link to my build here:
                      http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/f6/3...lly-19181.html

                      Check out my pictures here:

                      Selected pictures of the build.

                      https://picasaweb.google.com/1168565...g&noredirect=1





                      sigpic “In theory, theory and practice are the same. In practice, they are not.” ― Albert Einstein

                      Comment


                      • Re: My 40" Inch pizza oven in Florida

                        Bruce,
                        By the looks of your pics on your thread I notice you may have used a wooden pizza peel to check your joints. I simulated a metal peel with my square edged trowel. I read that the wooden peels are used mainly for placing pizzas. The heat takes a toll on them. A metal peel may catch more.
                        Respectfully,

                        KB

                        My build
                        Oven Pics (album under construction)

                        Comment


                        • Re: My 40" Inch pizza oven in Florida

                          Originally posted by kbartman View Post
                          Bruce,
                          By the looks of your pics on your thread I notice you may have used a wooden pizza peel to check your joints. I simulated a metal peel with my square edged trowel. I read that the wooden peels are used mainly for placing pizzas. The heat takes a toll on them. A metal peel may catch more.
                          Good point. Actually I also used a short handled metal peel and it also didn't catch. Thanks for keeping an eye out for me. Spent some time building a arch template. Have the two sides cut out just need to add the spacers and put them together.
                          Link to my build here:
                          http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/f6/3...lly-19181.html

                          Check out my pictures here:

                          Selected pictures of the build.

                          https://picasaweb.google.com/1168565...g&noredirect=1





                          sigpic “In theory, theory and practice are the same. In practice, they are not.” ― Albert Einstein

                          Comment


                          • Re: My 40" Inch pizza oven in Florida

                            Originally posted by Bec1208 View Post
                            Good point. Actually I also used a short handled metal peel and it also didn't catch. Thanks for keeping an eye out for me. Spent some time building a arch template. Have the two sides cut out just need to add the spacers and put them together.
                            Try to place the spacers to allow you to clean the mortar that may squeeze out. Something I did not do. It is easy to clean the mortar joints and brick face with a damp sponge while the mortar is still setting up. If you wait to clean it up after you remove the arch. You will either chisel or live with it
                            Last edited by kbartman; 04-26-2013, 01:27 PM. Reason: added pic and spelling
                            Respectfully,

                            KB

                            My build
                            Oven Pics (album under construction)

                            Comment


                            • Re: My 40" Inch pizza oven in Florida

                              Originally posted by kbartman View Post
                              Try to place the spacers to allow you to clean the mortar that may squeeze out. Something I did not do. It is easy to clean the mortar joints and brick face with a damp sponge while the mortar is still setting up. If you wait to clean it up after you remove the arch. You will either chisel or live with it
                              Would it work to put a plastic sheet under the template?
                              Link to my build here:
                              http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/f6/3...lly-19181.html

                              Check out my pictures here:

                              Selected pictures of the build.

                              https://picasaweb.google.com/1168565...g&noredirect=1





                              sigpic “In theory, theory and practice are the same. In practice, they are not.” ― Albert Einstein

                              Comment


                              • Re: My 40" Inch pizza oven in Florida

                                I just realized I’m and now a apprentice……. Yippy…… my multiple post have push some of my questions far back in my posts…….I will try to reposts later…………… Again I cannot thank everyone enough for helping with your comments and suggestion keep posting.
                                Last edited by kbartman; 04-26-2013, 02:20 PM.
                                Respectfully,

                                KB

                                My build
                                Oven Pics (album under construction)

                                Comment

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