I'm not sure I'm putting this in the right place, but we'll start here. I've been dreaming of a wood fired oven for a decade or so now. Been reading these forums for most of that time, and feel like I finally have the money, space, and half the time I need to make it happen. So, here's my thinking. I'm going keep this top post as a place to chronical my plan as we go along. Hopefully this system lets me update my post as I go along. I'll use replies on my own post to actually ask questions and have a conversation. My hope is that will allow any future reader to glean the overall summary from this top post without having to dig through multiple pages of back and forth. We'll see how that goes...
So, here's the plan so far:
- 42 inch internal diameter hemisphere oven
- 88" square by 3.5" deep concrete hearth. This will be filled with a bunch of rebar and poured with a home mix of white portland cement, a TBD aggregate, sand, super plasticizer, and PVA fibers
- I'll also float glow aggregate and crushed glass in the top layer of this, and grind/polish the exposed areas to get a nice pretty counter top
- 64" square cinderblock base (note, this leaves 12" overhangs on all sides of the base, and puts the walls of the oven itself just inside the cinderblock base.
- I'll have openings on two sides of the base with a divider in between them. One side will be for the dog, the other for firewood.
- I also plan to put some bolts in the underside of the hearth to later mount brackets to. This will let me store my tools under the hearth
- 2 or 4 inches (I'm thinking 4) of insulation board under the oven walls and floor
- half brick dome sides (4")
- 3" of ceramic blanket and 2" of stucco finish
- I plan to put an air-gap (filled with door gasket?) between the inner arch and my chimney arch
- I also plan to do a semi-circle arch with "filler bricks" on the side. I saw this on another post and liked the control over airflow that it provided, as well as the better access when needed
- I'm working on a 3d-printed Indispensable Tool because it seems like the easiest way to go for what I want to do, and it appears to be a needed contribution back to the community
So far, I have poured the base slab, built the stand, filled half the cavities in the stand, framed out my hearth, and laid my rebar. I'm doing a few test pours on the concrete mix to get the color and strength my wife tells me I need.
So, here's the plan so far:
- 42 inch internal diameter hemisphere oven
- 88" square by 3.5" deep concrete hearth. This will be filled with a bunch of rebar and poured with a home mix of white portland cement, a TBD aggregate, sand, super plasticizer, and PVA fibers
- I'll also float glow aggregate and crushed glass in the top layer of this, and grind/polish the exposed areas to get a nice pretty counter top
- 64" square cinderblock base (note, this leaves 12" overhangs on all sides of the base, and puts the walls of the oven itself just inside the cinderblock base.
- I'll have openings on two sides of the base with a divider in between them. One side will be for the dog, the other for firewood.
- I also plan to put some bolts in the underside of the hearth to later mount brackets to. This will let me store my tools under the hearth
- 2 or 4 inches (I'm thinking 4) of insulation board under the oven walls and floor
- half brick dome sides (4")
- 3" of ceramic blanket and 2" of stucco finish
- I plan to put an air-gap (filled with door gasket?) between the inner arch and my chimney arch
- I also plan to do a semi-circle arch with "filler bricks" on the side. I saw this on another post and liked the control over airflow that it provided, as well as the better access when needed
- I'm working on a 3d-printed Indispensable Tool because it seems like the easiest way to go for what I want to do, and it appears to be a needed contribution back to the community
So far, I have poured the base slab, built the stand, filled half the cavities in the stand, framed out my hearth, and laid my rebar. I'm doing a few test pours on the concrete mix to get the color and strength my wife tells me I need.
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