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Craig Schroeder Craig Schroeder is offline
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Default Insulation for Pizza oven

Andy, I've good luck with 3M's Nextel fabrics for some work related
applications. They are essentially like Thinsulate fibers but made
with ceramics. They are very pliable and easily
shaped/folded/stacked, etc. Here's some info:

http://tinyurl.com/2wutkh

I can't direct you to a source (I work in another area of 3M and get
it internally). It helps keep the space shuttle insulated so it would
likely work for your pizza oven! NASCAR teams also use it as
insulating barriers between hot exhausts and the cockpits for driver
comfort, too. I mention this as it might be available through racing
supply catalogs and sources.

http://tinyurl.com/2twawp

http://tinyurl.com/3223z6



On Sat, 26 May 2007 23:00:04 +0100, "Andy Phillips"
wrote:

Hi,
I have a pizza oven made from refractory cement (see
http://www.purimachos.demon.co.uk/pizza.htm). This works OK, but the walls
are not thick enough to retain much heat - therefore, having heated the
oven with a wood fire and raked it out, it's only possible to cook about two
pizzas before it's cooled down. I'd like to be able to cook at least four
pizzas and maybe some bread afterwards. I therefore need to thicken the wall
to increase the heat capacity - I thought by adding at least one course of
bricks around the sides and top of the oven, followed by an inch or so of
render. Question is, do I need to use special heat-proof bricks (eg
firebricks) and cement, or can I get away with normal house bricks and
mortar? I'm concerned that the mortar and render will crack - when in use,
the outer wall of the oven gets too hot to touch for more than an instant -
I would guess about 100-140C.
Any advice appreciated.
Andy


Craig Schroeder
craig nospam craigschroeder com