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re: Outdoor Wood Fire Oven

Posted on 7/23/20 at 10:34 am to
Posted by lsucm10
Baton Rouge
Member since Sep 2010
1316 posts
Posted on 7/23/20 at 10:34 am to
quote:

I build a Forno Brava Pompeii oven from the plans off their site. Let me know if you have questions related to that.


I was looking over those plans and noticed qty's. The slab requires 46ea 80# bags of mix. Did you rent a mixer or have someone else poor your slab? This is for the bigger oven. The 36" oven requires about the same amount as I have figured thus far. Where did you get all of your high temp supplies? I thought about the brick oven, because it looks awesome but my skill set is limited lol. I did see Flamsmith has a brick kit that they precut the bricks. Its tempting. I would like to see pictures of yours if you wanna post them here and here how the weather effects your oven if your from around this area.

Thanks
Posted by TigerTaco
Baton Rouge
Member since Jan 2011
373 posts
Posted on 7/23/20 at 8:41 pm to
When I poured the slab, I emptied half the bags on top of the plastic sheeting covering the ground. I added water and mixed it in place. I added rebar on top then mixed the remaining bags in a wheelbarrow. With a helper, I think we finished in about an hour. Later in the build, a friend let me borrow a mixer, but it was easier just to mix in a wheelbarrow. I used the home brew high temp mix, the fire clay came from a ceramic shop in the Mammoth Drive area and the lime came from the hardware store on Foster. That’s the only place I could find the right type of lime. I think the common stuff for agricultural use won’t work. Portland cement and sand came from Home Depot. It’s been a while so I may have fire brick brands wrong, but the Butler bricks around town are not as dense and uniform as the Halsey brand I bought in New Orleans. For a 42” oven I think I used 250 bricks. All that said, if I did it again I would strongly consider building a poured dome using refractory. The bricks look a lot better though. My dome is stucco. I added waterproofing to the mix, but it does get damp when it doesn’t have frequent use. To do a 90 second pizza cook, I do need to light a fire a day or two before to dry it out so that I get 900+ temps at the dome and 650 on the floor. I cook right on brick floor. Preheating isn’t necessary when I use it frequently. When it’s dry and I do a long/hot burn, the oven will still be a few hundred degrees days later. I bought the insulation from Distributors International in Gonzales. I have 3 to 4 inches of insulation board under the floor and a few inches of insulating cloth over the dome. That’s the key to holding in heat along with an insulated door. Email me at my screen name at g mail if you want some pics.
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