Originally posted by JRPizza
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”Expansion joints must be provided in the brickwork of kilns. If no expansion space is provided for, the kiln will bulge and swell on heating due to the expansion of the bricks In practice, a space of about 1/4 inch is allowed between the ends of every third or fourth brick. This space should not be filled with mortar. More space than this is sometimes allowed just to be sure that the wall will not be too tight. In kiln building it is much better to have a loose structure than a tight one. For this reason the amateur may have a slight advantage over the professional mason, because his bricklaying is apt to be somewhat loose and not tightly locked together. I have seen kilns made by professional bricklayers which in use suffered severe cracking and swelling due to the overly tight and precise workmanship and the lack of expansion joints.”
We’re talking around 1% expansion from ambient to stoneware temperature, so about 10 mm/m, or for an oven around half that from ambient to pizza temp. A 1/4” expansion pushing against a cooler outer decorative arch or base of the dome can certainly place stress on it if not a crack unless allowance is made. Although, as they say, there are two types of oven owners, those whose ovens have cracks and those who lie about their ovens having cracks. The same applies with kilns.
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