I have opted for a horizontal soldier course instead of a vertical course to eliminate the large mortar gaps that vertical soldier courses suffer from. So my "soldiers" (something of an abused term in the horizontal case, unless they're sleeping on duty) will consist of three layers of bricks stacked horizontally, the first layer at floor-level (around and at-level with the floor), the second and third layers form the first rise of the wall (thus my dome will have a five inch plus mortar gaps vertical rise before beginning to curve).
I understand that in the curved sections, one should ideally shoot for a minimum mortar gap, none if at all possible, which makes sense since the gap on the outside of the dome will provide plenty of space for mortar. However, in the case of flat stacked bricks, no mortar gap would truly amount to NO mortar gap; I could conceivably lay the bricks face to face with no mortar or just a film of mortar that squeezes out tight.
Or, as with conventional horizontal bricks in most brick work the world over, I could actually lift the second and third soldier layers above the layer beneath them by a purposeful gap and fill the gap with mortar.
So, what's the best approach here? Thin film, squeezed out tight, with no true gap at all or an intentional lifted gap? If the latter, what should I shoot for? 1/16", 1/8", something else?
I understand that in the curved sections, one should ideally shoot for a minimum mortar gap, none if at all possible, which makes sense since the gap on the outside of the dome will provide plenty of space for mortar. However, in the case of flat stacked bricks, no mortar gap would truly amount to NO mortar gap; I could conceivably lay the bricks face to face with no mortar or just a film of mortar that squeezes out tight.
Or, as with conventional horizontal bricks in most brick work the world over, I could actually lift the second and third soldier layers above the layer beneath them by a purposeful gap and fill the gap with mortar.
So, what's the best approach here? Thin film, squeezed out tight, with no true gap at all or an intentional lifted gap? If the latter, what should I shoot for? 1/16", 1/8", something else?
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