I built the oven shown in 2009 in Seattle (I added the extra tall stovepipe to try to get an abusive neighbor to leave me along about the smoke). I have since moved, and consequently lost my beloved oven (I honestly considered hiring a flatbed and a crane to move it; I loved it that much). So I'm gingerly researching options for building a second oven, although I admit that if I do this again, I will want to keep it pretty simple and try to get the job done in a timely and effort-minimizing manner. There are some things I would like to improve upon in a second oven however, despite my primary goal of getting the job done quickly and easily. I was quite discouraged with the heat-up times of my first oven. I had to stand out there feeding it wood for two hours before I could use it. My floor was face-up bricks (so 2.5" thick") resting on three layers of InsBlock 19 (3"). My dome was the standard Pompeii design: width-wise bricks (4.5") wrapped in bulk (not blanket) InsWool HP, 3" thick around the base and 6" on the top, then encased several more inches in 8:1 vermicrete around the base and 10:1 vermicrete over the top (or 50/50 vermiculite/perlite in later stages, when I ran out of vermiculate).
Here's my webpage for the build, if you're curious: http://keithwiley.com/brickPizzaOven.shtml and http://keithwiley.com/brickPizzaOvenPictures.shtml
Despite what I interpret as pretty generous insulation, it took a long time to heat up the oven, which I attribute to the 4.5" walls soaking up the heat, not necessarily the insulation leaking the heat away, so I would like to improve on that design if I build a second oven.
I have seen some discussions of using thirds-lengthwise-bricks for the walls, so 3" thick instead of 4.5", but didn't feel that those threads came to much of a conclusion on the benefits and tradeoffs. I'm also curious about the option applying bricks face-on (so 2.5" thick walls). The goal would be to reduce the thermal mass and speed up heat-up times. But of course, I don't want to lose so much mass that I can't achieve and maintain pizza temps, and I obviously don't want the dome to structurally fail.
It seems to me that 2.5" surely ought to heat up to 1000F without any trouble, and then stay there so long as I keep a fire going. Why does it need to be an incredibly thick wall? That makes no thermal sense to me, unless the insulation is so poor that heat is escaping out the back faster than it is coming in the front from the fire and a thicker wall simply slows down the heat escape, but surely more insulation would do a better job at that task than more thermal mass, right?
The metal commercial ovens that have become quite the rage obviously have very little thermal mass or insulation. So, it seems possible to build a brick oven with 2.5" thick walls, but no one on Forno Bravo ever does that. Is the only reason 2.5" walls aren't encouraged the fact that it makes the dome a less stable arch, risking collapse, or does the Pompeii design actually encourage 4.5" walls for thermal and cooking reasons, despite the frustrating wait times? Obviously, I don't want my dome to collapse, but what is the reason for encouraging people to use 4.5" walls? Is it merely a structural/strength argument or is there a firing/cooking reason that I am not properly appreciating?
What about 3" walls, achieved by applying thirds-bricks along the long axis? Is there a strong argument for doing that instead of 2.5" face-on bricks? I feel like face-on bricks would be less cutting. I could even use full-size bricks facing into the oven instead of cutting them into smaller pieces. Yes, the dome would look less pretty from the inside with rectangular bricks facing inward, but like I said, since this would be my second oven, I really don't want it to be a time-consuming project. I would want to get it built pretty quickly. Wrapping face-on bricks into a dome seems like an incredibly fast design. I could even shave thin triangles off the ends to give them a little bit of a taper so they wouldn't literally "fall out" of the ceiling. Just a touch of wedge-shaping would alleviate that risk, I believe.
Thoughts?
Thanks.
Here's my webpage for the build, if you're curious: http://keithwiley.com/brickPizzaOven.shtml and http://keithwiley.com/brickPizzaOvenPictures.shtml
Despite what I interpret as pretty generous insulation, it took a long time to heat up the oven, which I attribute to the 4.5" walls soaking up the heat, not necessarily the insulation leaking the heat away, so I would like to improve on that design if I build a second oven.
I have seen some discussions of using thirds-lengthwise-bricks for the walls, so 3" thick instead of 4.5", but didn't feel that those threads came to much of a conclusion on the benefits and tradeoffs. I'm also curious about the option applying bricks face-on (so 2.5" thick walls). The goal would be to reduce the thermal mass and speed up heat-up times. But of course, I don't want to lose so much mass that I can't achieve and maintain pizza temps, and I obviously don't want the dome to structurally fail.
It seems to me that 2.5" surely ought to heat up to 1000F without any trouble, and then stay there so long as I keep a fire going. Why does it need to be an incredibly thick wall? That makes no thermal sense to me, unless the insulation is so poor that heat is escaping out the back faster than it is coming in the front from the fire and a thicker wall simply slows down the heat escape, but surely more insulation would do a better job at that task than more thermal mass, right?
The metal commercial ovens that have become quite the rage obviously have very little thermal mass or insulation. So, it seems possible to build a brick oven with 2.5" thick walls, but no one on Forno Bravo ever does that. Is the only reason 2.5" walls aren't encouraged the fact that it makes the dome a less stable arch, risking collapse, or does the Pompeii design actually encourage 4.5" walls for thermal and cooking reasons, despite the frustrating wait times? Obviously, I don't want my dome to collapse, but what is the reason for encouraging people to use 4.5" walls? Is it merely a structural/strength argument or is there a firing/cooking reason that I am not properly appreciating?
What about 3" walls, achieved by applying thirds-bricks along the long axis? Is there a strong argument for doing that instead of 2.5" face-on bricks? I feel like face-on bricks would be less cutting. I could even use full-size bricks facing into the oven instead of cutting them into smaller pieces. Yes, the dome would look less pretty from the inside with rectangular bricks facing inward, but like I said, since this would be my second oven, I really don't want it to be a time-consuming project. I would want to get it built pretty quickly. Wrapping face-on bricks into a dome seems like an incredibly fast design. I could even shave thin triangles off the ends to give them a little bit of a taper so they wouldn't literally "fall out" of the ceiling. Just a touch of wedge-shaping would alleviate that risk, I believe.
Thoughts?
Thanks.
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