I have one area around my flue that is too oddball shaped to cut, so I need a small amount of castable refractory. Being the cheapskate that I am, I decided to formulate my own and test it. I have a propane heat gun that gives the following results:
at 6" from nozzle: 1120 F
at 12": 650 F
at 24": 390 F
I also wanted to test the perlite cement samples I had already made.
The first batch I used was:
1 part portland
1 part fire clay
1 part fine silica sand
It was very sticky and workable and dried with no shrinkage cracking.
It only took 30 seconds at 6" F for it to begin spalling. I got tired of holding it at 12" with no spalling (about 2 minutes). It appears that the sand was popping, probably from expansion.
Second batch is:
1/2 part portland
1 part fireclay
1 part fine coal slag
It is also very sticky and workable, I will dry it today and test it tomorrow.
Third batch is:
1/2 portland
1 part fireclay
1 part marble dust (1/4" to fines)
It is also very sticky and workable, I will dry it today and test it tomorrow.
The perl-crete sample was an 8 to 1 mix formed into a 5x7x2" slab. I heated it at 6" until it was glowing red (about 45 seconds), and the backside, while warm, was touchable. No material degradation at all after a total of about 3 minutes.
at 6" from nozzle: 1120 F
at 12": 650 F
at 24": 390 F
I also wanted to test the perlite cement samples I had already made.
The first batch I used was:
1 part portland
1 part fire clay
1 part fine silica sand
It was very sticky and workable and dried with no shrinkage cracking.
It only took 30 seconds at 6" F for it to begin spalling. I got tired of holding it at 12" with no spalling (about 2 minutes). It appears that the sand was popping, probably from expansion.
Second batch is:
1/2 part portland
1 part fireclay
1 part fine coal slag
It is also very sticky and workable, I will dry it today and test it tomorrow.
Third batch is:
1/2 portland
1 part fireclay
1 part marble dust (1/4" to fines)
It is also very sticky and workable, I will dry it today and test it tomorrow.
The perl-crete sample was an 8 to 1 mix formed into a 5x7x2" slab. I heated it at 6" until it was glowing red (about 45 seconds), and the backside, while warm, was touchable. No material degradation at all after a total of about 3 minutes.
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