Hi everybody,
After my year of lurking, I am well underway.
I plan to post pictures soon but as I am taking this week off to work on my oven I have a couple questions.
After my year of lurking, I am well underway.
I plan to post pictures soon but as I am taking this week off to work on my oven I have a couple questions.
- As you may know I have determined that Roxul rockboard 80 is NOT a good sub-hearth insulation board. I am trying to do this oven on the cheep and need a good alternative. I am planing on using the Insblock 19 (locally available and cheaper though probably inferior to FB Board) for the top layer but would like 4 more inches of insulation below. For this I propose to use polyisocyanurate heavy duty, which has a compression rating of 100 psi and operating temp limit of 250F. From my reading here it seems to be a bit of a consensus that under the first layer of higher tech insulation temps should not really exceed 160, right? I had considered the vermiculite mix but its insulative properties are quite a bit lower than polyiso and other products. So what do you all think?
- On morter, I was intrigued by using the Fire clay Calcium aluminate mix as it is more genuinely refractive, and I am not to intimidated by its difficulty, having experience with rapidly setting products, but I have not found a local source. I like the fact that its strength is in large part catalytic as opposed to an air dry pre-mix that will not strengthen until heated. The portland mix stumps me because I thought that regular cement did not hold up in high heat and I could not understand why replacing aggregate with fire clay obviated that problem. I turn to the great amassed wisdom of the group for a recommendation on morter. If I go with the pre-mixed how much am I likely to use? I will not be doing nearly as much cutting to fit as many of the other fine ovens builders have done. Is the ease of premixed worth the extra cost?
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