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| You probably already have completed your herringbone pattern. If not I have one suggestion for getting the layout. You can snap chalk lines centered and at 90 degrees to one another. I laid this out in my tile program and you have lots of cutting regardless of where you set the pattern start. Luckily firebrick is easy to work with. I saw a picture of an oven with a granite landing. You can get granite counter tiles that are 3/8 x 12 x 12 for about 12 bucks each. Don't know if it would hold up though. DrDuktayp |
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| You probably want more room in front, rather than in back. If your landing is too shallow, you won't have room to build your vent. I'd make the distance the same, sides and back, where it looks now like you have extra rear space. Just as an aside, it looks like you have room for eight inches on insulation between the dome and the side wall. If you use a blanket, you can cut that down to six, and have a larger diameter oven. I went with a 36 oven because of space constraints, but it looks like you have extra room. Most builders would consider a 39 or 40 inch oven a lot more practical from a cooking standpoint than a 36. I've been hanging around here for a couple of years, and I never heard anyone say that they wish they had a smaller oven. |
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| Thanks for the help. The boss says she likes the igloo so leaving room for walls around the dome isn't an issue. I think I'll just have to insulate the dome a little more. There are 2 or 3 options in the pompeii plans, does anyone have a view on which is best for the Igloo? 1'' Insulfrax + 4'' vermiculite or 6'' Vermiculite or 2''-3'' Insulfrax Drake, I haven't even laid the hearth yet as the weather has been too wet on my free weekends. Any pointers to reduce work greatly appreciated. cheers ian |
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| I would just say (as Dmun says) make the dome as large as possible. I will ask someone else to comment on the best combo of insulation for an igloo finish. I would aslo say that extra space at the front of the dome (landing and shelf space) is extremely useful. Having some shelf on the front of the stand is really helpfuly during oven use. I use the shelf in front of the oven to hold my beer, my ir thermometer, and sometimes a cutting board to unload a pizza onto... Drake |
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| Since I did an igloo I will throw my 2 cents in concerning insulation. As everyone keeps saying, you can never have too much insulation. I used a 2" insulfrax blanket covered with 3-3 1/2" of perlcrete (perlite and portland cement) This was then covered with 1" of type N mortar to give me a good uniform base for covering with mosaic tile. I used the fortified thinset for setting the tile. According to my IR thermometer I have no more than a 5 degree increase in my outside dome temp - this is after having reached pizza temps and cooking several pizzas. On a sunny day.....I can't detect any rise in temp (the cobalt blue tile I used absorb a lot of the sun's heat) As for heat retention, I have used my oven several times on the day following pizza making. If I put my non-insulated steel door in place right after the pizzas I will have an inside dome temp of 360-380 degrees and a hearth temp of 325-340 degrees the next day (24 hours later). I've been totally happy with my oven's performance. Just remember, as the ads always say.....your mileage may vary. RT |
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J W |
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| i am done thru the concrete hearth and was wondering if in stead of pouring a vermiculite slab i could put a couple of extra courses of firebrick at the base since i have a lot of culls left from a job thanks dave |
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| Dave, Extra firebrick would only be good if you wanted greater thermal mass. They would not be a substitute for the insualtion layer of vermiculite concrete. They would also eventually transfer the heat to the structural slab further wicking away the heat from your oven. Hope this helps! Dutch |
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