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No Form Brick Oven

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  • No Form Brick Oven

    here are my brick oven photos. I built it using no forms all the way to the top. My father said they used to do it in Italy and I said if he can I can.
    Here are the pics:

    Yahoo! Photos - brick oven

    If you have any questions let me know.

  • #2
    Re: No Form Brick Oven

    [QUOTE=camarina73;8186]and I said if he can I can.

    ...... e cosi` hai fatto! (and so you did!) looks really neat. Well done!
    happy cooking!
    John

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    • #3
      Re: No Form Brick Oven

      You did a great job. Fabricating the double arch and entry flat before starting the dome is a GREAT idea, and I think it should be made the standard of high-class oven building. That vent is really hard to build after the fact, and I think you've solved one of the worst part of the puzzle. It's a lot easier to trim your upper dome bricks to meet the arch than vice versa.

      I urge everyone to click through and look at the 124 pics. It's a really high class job.
      My geodesic oven project: part 1, part 2

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      • #4
        Re: No Form Brick Oven

        There is some really nice brick work on that oven. I am really impressed with the trasition between the dome and the vent as you worked your way up. Also the dome is amazingly symetrical after it leaves the vent. Great work also with the vent itself. My hat goes off to you.

        Cheers, John
        "Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work." Thomas A. Edison

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        • #5
          Re: No Form Brick Oven

          Unbelievable. Dmun, I whole heartedly agree with you regarding the arch.. Camarina.. What did you use for mortar? How did you stop your bricks from slipping? So many questions.. Inspiring work.

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          • #6
            Re: No Form Brick Oven

            That looks great!

            I built the entrance arch after the first 1 or 2 rings went in, and I thought it was fairly easy to join the rings to it. My little tile saw took two passes, and I had to freehand everything, so my cuts weren't as accurate as they could have been.

            What did you use to set the radius of the dome? I used a quarter-circle of plywood, but had too much slippage near the end, so I resorted to styrofoam. Looking at your work, you use smaller pieces near the top. It seems that perhaps if I would have cut my brick pieces in half again, they would have stuck better, and had smaller mortar joints as well.
            -Chris-
            I'm building a Pompeii Oven in Austin, Texas. See my progress at:
            Il Forno Fumoso

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            • #7
              Re: No Form Brick Oven

              I used Refrax in the first three or four rings and the vent arch. I did not have enough refrax so I bought 2 bags of heatstop 50 for $130 a bag. I saved half a bag of refrax for the top because it works so well and i new it would set up in the perfect amount of time to finish the last three rings. Refrax is a much better product than heatstop. If you have small joints and perfect cuts than heatstop works well.
              I pre-cut all my vent arch pieces, then I put up the vertical portions. I installed the triangular pieces and a wood form for the arch ( so I guess I did use a form for something) The arch is very strong. I stood on it and hit and it does not budge.

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              • #8
                Re: No Form Brick Oven

                And I would like to thank everyone here, and James for all the information. All my Motivation and Ideas came from reading your posts.
                Thank You Again

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                • #9
                  Re: No Form Brick Oven

                  Also part of building without forms is the type of arch you make. I used the catenary arch. Measure a level line on a wall. mark the width of your oven. Put a mark at the center below that line of the height of your oven ceiling. Hang a loose string line at those three points and there is your arch. Make sure you tack a piece of cardboard on the wall first so you can trace that line to it. Also take into account the height of the first or however many rings you leave upright before your curve starts.

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                  • #10
                    Re: No Form Brick Oven

                    Very impressive Camarina. Thanks for documenting and posting.

                    No forms whatsoever for the dome? Just bricks and mortar or did you use temporary supports?

                    enjoy!
                    sigpicTiempo para guzarlos..... ...enjoy every sandwich!

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                    • #11
                      Catenary Arches

                      Catenary....caught a memory bank somewhere..... Gaudi, the Spanish Architect used the Catenary arches in a lot of his work in Spain. I remember seeing models of his strings hanging upside down in the Sagrada Familia in Barcelona.

                      This link might be of interest:

                      Catenary - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
                      sigpicTiempo para guzarlos..... ...enjoy every sandwich!

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                      • #12
                        Re: No Form Brick Oven

                        Jengineer posted a great link about the catenary arch a while back.. Hey mate, any chance you would post some of your photos here on the fornobravo site? The yahoo site took a while to load for me.. My Mac is very fast and I have broadband..

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                        • #13
                          Re: No Form Brick Oven

                          just my hands, bricks and mortar

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                          • #14
                            Re: No Form Brick Oven

                            i don't know how to reduce size or quality of pics to post them that is why i put them on Yahoo.

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                            • #15
                              Re: No Form Brick Oven

                              Carmarina,

                              I'm a professional mason, and I have to say you've done a job any pro would be proud to call his own.

                              Well done.

                              Jim
                              "Made are tools, and born are hands"--William Blake, 1757-1827

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