Re: New 36inch castable build in Brisbane
My oven is cast like yours, but I made wooden forms first. I also built it inside my garage with a reinforced base that allows me to move it--at least into and out of the garage using a forklift. I first did not know where to put the oven permanently but now it is decided. I have read too many stories of ovens that get water inside that need to be dried out repeatedly--I have chosen to make a permanent place under cover with less chance of rain damaging it. We get a lot of rain here and typhoons that hit us every year. Also, want to be able to use it no matter the weather or season--day or night. So that is the reason for permanent place. The structure is not that large--9 feet (2.73m) x 24 feet (7.28m) most being wood storage. I decided to change the way I handle wood also. I'll be making metal cages that attach to the top of plastic pallets. I can fill the cages when processing the wood, cover them with a tarp and shrink wrap it into place (on top of the pile) and allow it to air dry outdoors. When it is partially seasoned, it can be forked into the shed. I'll use a pallet jack to move the pallets around as needed. This preparation takes the piling and re-piling out of storing wood. Just need to move the fully seasoned wood to the front for use, and keep filling the shed as wood becomes available. Each pallet will contain 1.8m3 of wood if tightly stacked and the shed will hold 18m3 in total. There will be plenty of wood for several years considering that volume.
My final finish on the oven will be a Japan Plaster treatment. The product is sold as Cal Nouvelle and can be pigmented to a wide variety of colors. It can be used as an interior or exterior treatment--waterproof??? I really do not think so--but like all masonry absorbs some but is very stable. There are a whole variety of plasters available here through specialty masonry outlets--some traditional with hemp fiber and others with modern fiber.
The oven is out of commission for a while right now because I cannot get a forklift close enough to move it outdoors. There are two huge piles of sand and crushed stone blocking the entrance to the garage right now. I am mixing all the concrete by hand for my footings, short walls, and a retainer wall near the main road. The actual slabs will use ready mix. Maybe I can make an opening large enough to get the oven out long enough to roast a Thanksgiving Turkey.
Do you Auzzies celebrate some type of Thanksgiving or is that just a Yank thing? The Japanese have a day similar to Thanksgiving but don't know the name for it.
My oven is cast like yours, but I made wooden forms first. I also built it inside my garage with a reinforced base that allows me to move it--at least into and out of the garage using a forklift. I first did not know where to put the oven permanently but now it is decided. I have read too many stories of ovens that get water inside that need to be dried out repeatedly--I have chosen to make a permanent place under cover with less chance of rain damaging it. We get a lot of rain here and typhoons that hit us every year. Also, want to be able to use it no matter the weather or season--day or night. So that is the reason for permanent place. The structure is not that large--9 feet (2.73m) x 24 feet (7.28m) most being wood storage. I decided to change the way I handle wood also. I'll be making metal cages that attach to the top of plastic pallets. I can fill the cages when processing the wood, cover them with a tarp and shrink wrap it into place (on top of the pile) and allow it to air dry outdoors. When it is partially seasoned, it can be forked into the shed. I'll use a pallet jack to move the pallets around as needed. This preparation takes the piling and re-piling out of storing wood. Just need to move the fully seasoned wood to the front for use, and keep filling the shed as wood becomes available. Each pallet will contain 1.8m3 of wood if tightly stacked and the shed will hold 18m3 in total. There will be plenty of wood for several years considering that volume.
My final finish on the oven will be a Japan Plaster treatment. The product is sold as Cal Nouvelle and can be pigmented to a wide variety of colors. It can be used as an interior or exterior treatment--waterproof??? I really do not think so--but like all masonry absorbs some but is very stable. There are a whole variety of plasters available here through specialty masonry outlets--some traditional with hemp fiber and others with modern fiber.
The oven is out of commission for a while right now because I cannot get a forklift close enough to move it outdoors. There are two huge piles of sand and crushed stone blocking the entrance to the garage right now. I am mixing all the concrete by hand for my footings, short walls, and a retainer wall near the main road. The actual slabs will use ready mix. Maybe I can make an opening large enough to get the oven out long enough to roast a Thanksgiving Turkey.
Do you Auzzies celebrate some type of Thanksgiving or is that just a Yank thing? The Japanese have a day similar to Thanksgiving but don't know the name for it.
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