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No wife no kids got some stuff done, holidays are great in the aussie summer. Hot but not too hot. Cricket in the background. Good times.
My fire bricks for the oven are recycled from an old tiln so working them perfectly into postion is becoming quite a task, but over all quite happy so far with the build. Never used mortar for anything before this is a new learning curve.
Am curious why you beveled the inside of your inner arch bricks on the inside front?
What is your theory on the door having done this? as it may make the reveal and sealing the door somewhat tricky.
Dont really know Colin. little bit in me thinks the smoke will escape faster, the other bit in me thinks its going to look like a better transition to the chimney arch. Then another little bit in me was drunk when I made a test cut and liked it so I just ran with it. Always wanted a slightly different build to all others, maybe I just got my wish! I got some recycled Calsil bricks, may use a full length brick for the chimney arch not the notched part like you see here. I like the Calsil 'whiteness', I know it will discolour over time but for now it looks good.
G'day
From the pics the outer entrance and the oven mouth seem to be the same size? Please correct me if I'm wrong. That will make it very hard to fit a door as you have to get it past the outer. Tzcar has a 2 piece door I believe for this reason.
If your not to advanced you might consider re designing the entranceway say 50 mm oversize to the oven mouth. You'll still get revel this way and a seal for a door. The cut to the entrance brick will make you door a different shape but has the advantage of lessening the chance of chipping the entrance which can happen easy enough.
Regards dave
Measure twice
Cut once
Fit in position with largest hammer
Dont really know Colin. little bit in me thinks the smoke will escape faster, the other bit in me thinks its going to look like a better transition to the chimney arch. Then another little bit in me was drunk when I made a test cut and liked it so I just ran with it. Always wanted a slightly different build to all others, maybe I just got my wish! I got some recycled Calsil bricks, may use a full length brick for the chimney arch not the notched part like you see here. I like the Calsil 'whiteness', I know it will discolour over time but for now it looks good.
I may have misunderstood. But, if those "Calsil brick" are calcium silicate they have no structural integrity for the use that you have pictured. The "discoloration" wont be a problem. It will fall off into your food .
Joe Watson " A year from now, you will wish that you had started today" My Build Album / My Build
Yep you can't use them for that purpose. the flue Needs a solid support base.
Still curious about your door design drunk or not
Going to be very difficult to seal the door. I would consider losing the bevel. I know that is a lot of work but even I knocked done my flue gallery having completed it as it was not deep enough.
I dont think these bricks are calsil. I may have made a mistake in there composition. I will do more research. The door seal will be fine guys. Trust me.
The build has started. 40" pompeii. With mosaic tile exterior.
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