A bit of a contrarian view on a couple of points.
I love having thermocouples imbedded in the masonry. The data they provide is meaningless for cooking pizza, but I find it to be extremely valuable for doing large bakes of bread (say 20-30 loaves). The data provided tells me exactly when I'm heat loaded to the degree I'm shooting for.
Could I bake bread without the thermocouples? Obviously. But my results in large bakes would not be as consistient IMO. When I'm baking a bunch of bread I want the deepest portions of my masonry (in the ceiling arch) to be about 620 or so...and I want the surface temps to be about 580. For the hearth, I want the deep portions of the masonry to be about 600, and I want the hearth surface temp at 560. That temp mix is the ideal for my oven and allows me to bake up to forty-five, 1.5 pound loaves of bread on a single firing...in an oven with zero cladding. There is no way I can achieve those exact numbers without monitering. And no other way for me to know exactly when I'm where I want to be. I could simply build a huge fire and let it go a long time...but I'm likely to be over saturated and burn bread on the first bake.
The other thing, I have to take issue with Jay's numbers on clearing time (or loading time) for various ovens. The shape of the oven (pomeii vs. barrel vault) has no impact on how long it takes to clear...or saturate. The issue is thermal mass. If the oven has lots of mass, it takes a long time to clear and/or saturate. I can easily heat my oven to clearing (and pizza cooking temps) withiin an hour to an hour and fifteen minutes.
The pic below is from last weekend...that was a last minute pizza cook. The fire was lit at ten to seven. This pic was taken at 8:15-8:20.

For me..bottom line on thermocouples depends what your plans for your oven are. If baking bread they are worth doing in my opinion. If it's just pizza, probably not.
Bill
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