DennisK
Songster
Thanks DennisK, I'll figure out some way to isolate the concrete blocks from the oven platform then. Maybe I'll set the steel plate in a bed of cob to dissipate more of the heat before it comes in contact with the concrete bricks. What percentage mix of cement and clay did you use for your bricks? The soil we found is almost 100% clay so any additives we put in to help it remain stable and last longer the better as far as I'm concerned. I don't want to go to all this work to have to take it all apart again and redo it next year. That would be depressing.
If you can line your firebox with a clay mixture, I imagine that would save the cinder blocks. I started out using the common concrete mix of 1 part cement to 5 parts of aggregate and sand, but then I read somewhere that that much cement is not necessary as the dirt has a lot finer grain than sand; so I doubled the dirt (aggregate) proportion without any compromise to the brick. I haven’t tested how little cement I could get away with yet, as my test would also involve soaking the brick in water for a month. That proportion will be dependent on the kind of earth you are using. I suspect the higher clay content, the less cement is required – my guess. I tested the earth I was using by filling a quart mason jar with saltwater, then adding about half with the soil. After letting it stand undisturbed for a day, I could clearly see the different layers of rock, sand, clay and silt. My clay content was at about 20%. This is border-line for CEBs which are strict earth bricks made by compression. My current interest is in CEBs, but I haven’t made any yet. What I have been making are what I call “mudcrete blocks” which is a simple earth, cement, water mixture poured into a mold. I am pleased with how they turn out, but it is difficult to design a mold that will release my brick before it cures without it breaking. I have been making some complex shapes which involve more corners and a greater opportunity for the product to fail during release. I am making my forms out of steel which is painted and then baked. If I don’t bake the paint, the “mudcrete” will actually peal the paint off the form when I pry it lose! As far as free hand molding the “mudcrete” onto a form like an outside oven, I have done something like that with good results. I made a wood burning stove from an old propane tank and I lined the inside bottom with about an inch of “mudcrete”. It worked quite well as the tank bottom never got very hot due to the insulation properties of the “mudcrete”. That is why I think the firebox lining with mud will serve you well.