First of all, my soldier course will be laid flat, cut into wedges, piled three (or was it four?) bricks high. I like this design because it mitigates the thick mortar gaps that occur in nontapered vertical soldiers.
So, the outside of my solider course will be pure brick with no mortar gap and relatively long straight walls: either 9" or 4.5" long on the outside (I haven't decided if I will cut the bricks in half for those lower levels or not).
All of that said...I'm thinking about standing insulating board (Insblock 19) on end, flat up against the outer face of the soldiers, either 1" or 2" thick depending on which Insblock I buy.
I haven't seen anyone do anything like this on FB yet, so I'm a little weary, but Insblock is much cheaper if you buy it by the box and I will have quite a bit left after I insulating the floor (but not enough to do the floor twice).
What do you think?
I am also tempted by the prospect of using the Insblock 19 to eventually make a door, but other threads have kind of scared me against such an approach for reasons of toxicity. I might be able to seal it behind a steel sheet, but only if I can figure out how to cut, shape, and otherwise work with sheet metal, which seems like a dim prospect.
Thanks.
So, the outside of my solider course will be pure brick with no mortar gap and relatively long straight walls: either 9" or 4.5" long on the outside (I haven't decided if I will cut the bricks in half for those lower levels or not).
All of that said...I'm thinking about standing insulating board (Insblock 19) on end, flat up against the outer face of the soldiers, either 1" or 2" thick depending on which Insblock I buy.
I haven't seen anyone do anything like this on FB yet, so I'm a little weary, but Insblock is much cheaper if you buy it by the box and I will have quite a bit left after I insulating the floor (but not enough to do the floor twice).
What do you think?
I am also tempted by the prospect of using the Insblock 19 to eventually make a door, but other threads have kind of scared me against such an approach for reasons of toxicity. I might be able to seal it behind a steel sheet, but only if I can figure out how to cut, shape, and otherwise work with sheet metal, which seems like a dim prospect.
Thanks.
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