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Thanks for the kind words. I have plenty of insulation left over so that is a option. I have been trying to post more on my phone but I am having issues.
Ok here is some more information.? I made the front of the door out of 16 gage steel and 22 gage for the rest.? I got all wound up in actually having time to work I forgot to take pictures of everything.? But I will describe what I did. I took 2 6"x 18" 22 gage plates and drew out a 4" chanel in the middle and then cut triangles out of the edge every 1.5 ". After that I used a sheet metal pliers to bend the tabel up to 90 degrees. I did pretty much the same on the bottom but left 1" on each end and made the triangle notches 3" apart and then folded it up in to a box.? Next I cut my inside steel plate to shape so it fit with about 1\8" to spare.? And then traced the shape on to what would become the front of the door, and also a second line 1" out from that. I then cut my insulation to the size of my opening minus a little bit for the steel. Next I rivited the bottom to the inside and one end to the bottom . Then shoved the 2 pices of insulation in to the chanel and after that the other side.? Then I took clamps and pinched everything inside of the back plated rivited it down as I went. Once that was done I carves holes for the nuts on the handle for the door and then repeated the process for the front.
I now have a nice tight fit and only 1\8" or less room for play. I also painted the whole thing with 1200 degree flat black paint, and placed a 3\8" ceramic rope to act as a gasket . If anyone has a question about what I did just let me know.
Randy, since you painted it I am guessing you didn't use stainless steel? I'm asking because I am thinking of using mild/alloy steel for my door as I can weld it with the setup I have. If I want to use stainless I need to change my wire and my gas.
Jr you are correct I did use mild steel. I had no sorce for stainless and it is much harder to drill and cut. So I figured I would just paint it and hope for the best. If it looks like it needs more paint then I will just have to keep up with it.
Great looking door! I used mild steel and the v notch method to assemble my door, also. And, I also painted my door with high heat paint. I have since then removed the paint from the oven side of the door. I have some old pics of the door below. The third pic is what it looked like a few days after making some lump charcoal in the oven. The high heat paint did not hold up very well on the oven side and I feared that it was probably not very good for my health. Since removing the paint, I have oiled and seasoned the oven side of the door much like you would the inside of a BBQ grill. Since I don't store my door where it can get wet, the seasoned metal holds up just fine.
So it's not a plug type door, more of a blocker?
PS, sorry for the thread hijack Randy
Yes, that is correct. I have a fairly wide reveal. The door (if I place it directly in the center) covers an inch and a half of the reveal on each side and at the top.
Randy,
I too, did not mean to distract from your thread. I just wanted to add my thoughts about the high heat paint. You have a very fine door. I wish that I was allowed to weld , and also had the "ability" .
My gasket was glued on with the stuff that came with my ceramic rope. It was a replacement for a wood stove seal kit. I don't know what the stuff is that did the gluing. I talked to Mrchipster before I did it and he said that is what he did too. I hope this helps
Well I got a chance to try out my new insulating door. I am happy with the results. I cleared the dome and kept it going for a a few hours. Then put the door in and this morning the dome was 725F and the floor was 680 F. I cooled it down a little and then baked a dubble batch of cabitta. I am happy with how it turned out. I know there is room to improve but that is a good thing.
Just a short little up date. I checked the temp in my oven and on the 4th day I was still at 325F in the dome and 310F on the floor. The outside temps are a little warm by Minnesota standards bus 40F during the day and 30 at night. I don't know how this stacks up to others but it seams like it is pretty good.
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