Hi
I posted a question asking about using gas for powering the brick oven in my introduction and got some scary responses about explosions etc. so I decided to check it out thoroughly.
True, escaping gas in a closed space is a formula for an explosion, but there is no difference between a self made brick oven and a store bought conventional gas oven in your kitchen in this respect. If gas leaks into the oven and you strike a spark - BOOM. Think Arnold Schwarzenegger!
If however there is someone present in the bakery while the oven is being fired - they can easily see/smell if the gas is lit (or doused and leaking gas) and can ventilate the oven/room and avert any disaster.
Most of the brick oven bakeries here in Israel use gas and it is perfectly safe if the basic gas safety regulations are followed.
You can obviously spend a ton of money on fancy equipment for leak detection/prevention and alarm systems, but this is only really necessary in an automated environment where nobody is around to see what is going on. No fancy equipment can replace the good old eyes-and-nose-on-a-human-being in the room. Someone in the room where the oven is, is the best safety feature for gas usage.
When the person goes home for the day and they turn off the gas at the cylinder taps, there is no chance that gas can leak into the oven.
Obviously leaving the fire burning overnight unattended without electronic detection/shutoff valves is out of the question, however if you develop a firing schedule for the oven that can be built around human presence in the room with the oven, there is no explosion danger using gas.
That's what I was told by a number of expert gas technicians, so I thought I would share it with the forum.
Les
I posted a question asking about using gas for powering the brick oven in my introduction and got some scary responses about explosions etc. so I decided to check it out thoroughly.
True, escaping gas in a closed space is a formula for an explosion, but there is no difference between a self made brick oven and a store bought conventional gas oven in your kitchen in this respect. If gas leaks into the oven and you strike a spark - BOOM. Think Arnold Schwarzenegger!
If however there is someone present in the bakery while the oven is being fired - they can easily see/smell if the gas is lit (or doused and leaking gas) and can ventilate the oven/room and avert any disaster.
Most of the brick oven bakeries here in Israel use gas and it is perfectly safe if the basic gas safety regulations are followed.
You can obviously spend a ton of money on fancy equipment for leak detection/prevention and alarm systems, but this is only really necessary in an automated environment where nobody is around to see what is going on. No fancy equipment can replace the good old eyes-and-nose-on-a-human-being in the room. Someone in the room where the oven is, is the best safety feature for gas usage.
When the person goes home for the day and they turn off the gas at the cylinder taps, there is no chance that gas can leak into the oven.
Obviously leaving the fire burning overnight unattended without electronic detection/shutoff valves is out of the question, however if you develop a firing schedule for the oven that can be built around human presence in the room with the oven, there is no explosion danger using gas.
That's what I was told by a number of expert gas technicians, so I thought I would share it with the forum.
Les
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