Hi everyone,
After years of thinking/dreaming about building a pizza oven (and much reading of this forum!), I have finally started. My initial hope was to build the oven as well as an also long-planned pergola over an adjoining patio, both over the course of the summer. I built the pergola first and that took much more time than anticipated, so I'm only now ready to get started on the actual oven. The advantage of the pergola being finished is that I have been able to put up the roof over the oven already, as you can see in the third picture. (The roof will eventually get shingled, but for now it is just plywood being protected by a tarp, since I'll need to cut a hole in it for the chimney to go through).
I am building a 36" interior diameter oven, which will sit on a 5" thick hearth slab measuring 60" x 82". The support structure is cinder blocks in an H shape, or, perhaps more accurately, like a digital 8 with an opening on either end of 1 cinder block's width. This makes for a fairly narrow entrance into the wood storage, but I've tried and it seems easy enough to reach in and grab wood.
The hearth slab is cantilevered about 6" beyond the H frame on all sides. I like the look of the cantilever, but more importantly the idea is that this will mean that the cinder block walls are more or less directly under where the oven dome rests on the slab (the horizontal part of the H is closer to the front than the back, for the same reason).
The slab has 5 weep holes cast in it with 1/2" pvc pipe, and I have already bought el-cheapo tiles at the big orange store to put between the slab and the insulation. My next step is to purchase the insulation.
Here I have a question for forum experts: it looks like Distribution International has two different kinds of CalSil boards, from Johns Manville: Super Firetemp L and Super Firetemp M. Meanwhile, Johns Manville's website lists only Super Firetemp H, S, and X, so they're of no help in distinguishing between L and M. I assume the difference has something to do with how well it insulates vs. how well it resists compression. On the DI website, the specs are:
L - Compressive Strength : 450 psi, Density : 20 pcf, Thermal Conductivity : 0.54 to 0.73 Btu-in/hr-sq-ft-deg F
M - Compressive Strength : 900 psi, Density : 28 pcf, Thermal Conductivity : 0.61 to 0.8 Btu-in/hr-sq-ft-deg F
My complete layperson's guess is that L seems the better one for my purposes: that psi number seems fine, and the thermal conductivity is less. Am I right? In addition, they also list Foamglass; are there benefits for doing 2" foamglass and 2" CalSil over just 2 layers of 2" CalSil? I understand Foamglass is better at not absorbing water, but with the weepholes and the tiles underneath the insulation, that ought not to be an issue, I think.
Any thoughts/suggestions on which insulation to get would be much appreciated.
Maurits
After years of thinking/dreaming about building a pizza oven (and much reading of this forum!), I have finally started. My initial hope was to build the oven as well as an also long-planned pergola over an adjoining patio, both over the course of the summer. I built the pergola first and that took much more time than anticipated, so I'm only now ready to get started on the actual oven. The advantage of the pergola being finished is that I have been able to put up the roof over the oven already, as you can see in the third picture. (The roof will eventually get shingled, but for now it is just plywood being protected by a tarp, since I'll need to cut a hole in it for the chimney to go through).
I am building a 36" interior diameter oven, which will sit on a 5" thick hearth slab measuring 60" x 82". The support structure is cinder blocks in an H shape, or, perhaps more accurately, like a digital 8 with an opening on either end of 1 cinder block's width. This makes for a fairly narrow entrance into the wood storage, but I've tried and it seems easy enough to reach in and grab wood.
The hearth slab is cantilevered about 6" beyond the H frame on all sides. I like the look of the cantilever, but more importantly the idea is that this will mean that the cinder block walls are more or less directly under where the oven dome rests on the slab (the horizontal part of the H is closer to the front than the back, for the same reason).
The slab has 5 weep holes cast in it with 1/2" pvc pipe, and I have already bought el-cheapo tiles at the big orange store to put between the slab and the insulation. My next step is to purchase the insulation.
Here I have a question for forum experts: it looks like Distribution International has two different kinds of CalSil boards, from Johns Manville: Super Firetemp L and Super Firetemp M. Meanwhile, Johns Manville's website lists only Super Firetemp H, S, and X, so they're of no help in distinguishing between L and M. I assume the difference has something to do with how well it insulates vs. how well it resists compression. On the DI website, the specs are:
L - Compressive Strength : 450 psi, Density : 20 pcf, Thermal Conductivity : 0.54 to 0.73 Btu-in/hr-sq-ft-deg F
M - Compressive Strength : 900 psi, Density : 28 pcf, Thermal Conductivity : 0.61 to 0.8 Btu-in/hr-sq-ft-deg F
My complete layperson's guess is that L seems the better one for my purposes: that psi number seems fine, and the thermal conductivity is less. Am I right? In addition, they also list Foamglass; are there benefits for doing 2" foamglass and 2" CalSil over just 2 layers of 2" CalSil? I understand Foamglass is better at not absorbing water, but with the weepholes and the tiles underneath the insulation, that ought not to be an issue, I think.
Any thoughts/suggestions on which insulation to get would be much appreciated.
Maurits
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