As I said in the introduction thread here is the corner of the garden where I would like to build the Pompei oven,
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Genovese building Pompei in Birmingham UK
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Re: Genovese building Pompei in Birmingham UK
Hi all again...should I say buongiorno a tutti lol
I'have began with the building starting ffrom the foundation, I was looking at the plans for the pompei oven and I really don't understand the dome/brick vent building part. I'm not a super bricky lol
Could someone help me understand how to build/attach the dome onto the arched brick vent please, there is a photo but I don't understand it very well, practically when you arrive at the arch vent, do you cut the brick in a way to keep the dome brick line levelled?
And
How do you do the recess for the door?
Please help
Many thanks
Marco
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Re: Genovese building Pompei in Birmingham UK
It will get easier to understand with time. If you build your oven as per the plans, when you get to the point where the arch and dome meet you will be able to see the way the bricks need to shaped to achieve a good joint and maintain a close to circle shape (it will never be perfect). I used polystyrene foam as something I could shape as a brick and then transposed the angles to a real brick before I cut the brick. Don't be frightened, there will always be an answer here to help.
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Re: Genovese building Pompei in Birmingham UK
Marco, I was also worried about the transition and how the bricks would fit. When it came to it, fitting the dome bricks to the arch was a little fiddly, as there was a lot more cutting, at least for me, but it went together without too much difficulty. I suspect that if you follow the basic design of the hemispherical Pompeii, as I did, you wont have too many problems. Just to reiterate other comments it won't be perfect!
As far as the door recess, I'n sure there are different ways of doing it but I built the outer arch and vertical vent walls about 20mm outside the inner arch brick line if that makes sense.
There are some pictures on my blog which might help you visualise how it fits together.
Good luck
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Re: Genovese building Pompei in Birmingham UK
Hi all,
I encoutered the first problem.....oh dear and I'm only at the foundation. Unfortunally the floor foundation are only 1.50mt depth and 1.30mt width, already we know that we can't build a 36 inch oven if we assume that the oven floor with be that measures.
I have seen in the past in italy the over hanging oven floor, assuming that the oven stand will me 1.3mt x 1.5 mt, I could do a overhanging oven floor, with a hanging of about 0.15mt at the sides and 0.3mt at the rear and nothing at the front, using 1/4inch re-bar and 1/2 inch bar. This way should give me a oven floor of 1.6mt x 1.8mt (64 inches x 72 inches).
If you see from the photoes the oven will be build into the garden earth so de sides will be suported by earth, plus the steel. My intention its to bend the steel in a L shape, and sink one every other hole in the concrete blocks, on the 3 sides, then to tie it up to the horizontal steel that forms the oven floor.
Questions:
Do you think that its a good idea?
will the steel be strong enough?
Helllllllllllllpppppppppppppppp
Thanks
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Re: Genovese building Pompei in Birmingham UK
I'm no structural engineer and hopefully you will get a response from one, but I don't see this as a problem, particularly because of the relatively small extensions you are proposing.
In reality the brick part of the dome will be either on (at both sides) or slightly over (at the back), and it is only the relatively lighter building components ie thermal blanket and vermicrete that might be exerting force on the extension and even then not all of it because of the circular shape. If you want to add a little more structural support you could add an extra length of rebar but I personally don't think it's really necessary.
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Re: Genovese building Pompei in Birmingham UK
My oven size is 42" internal diameter.
I think the tool you're referring to is a jig or what's called here a 'dome gauge' as described in these 2 threads:
http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/28/h...ea-2573-3.html
http://www.fornobravo.com/forum/f28/...heme-2985.html
Or at least its my simple interpretation of those two tools using some wood, a hinge and a few little bits of metal hardware I bought from a diy store. I certainly found it useful in getting a good (not perfect) dome shape for the first 6 or 7 rows and then had to revert to a wood and polystyrene form. for the last few rows.
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