I just got my fire brick heat riser stove going a couple of days ago. But for example, this morning it's been running for 4 hours at about 500 degrees f at the lid (with some tweaks I am sure I can get it to go higher, it's been running fine, but i am using the full 4.5 width of the brick as the thickness of the riser, as opposed to some people who stack them on edge. Still, the insulation needs only allow the fire to remain hot while rising. I would think that even the 1.25 thin fire bricks on side would contain enough heat to keep the fire hot enough while rising. I would think that in no circumstance, with fire brick as a heat riser can you get enough heat bleed through to not allow the sides of the barrel to cool down that which comes out of the riser sufficiently so that it will contract in volume. This is a video of my prototype which I used, essentially unchanged in my current stove. It's 13 bricks high and I put a barrel over top, cutting a rectangular hole to allow the barrel to slip onover top of the heat riser and fire tunnel (that's what I call it anyway). In the video you will see that the half sawn bricks when laid up into an octagon form a star pattern. It is really quite pleasing to look at, with the star pattern reversing each course. But I am not so sure that the tips of the stars sticking out like that aren't flowing the down draft between the rise and barrel walls. It is relatively such a slight flow, I wouldn't think so, but if i had it to do over (and the time) when I cut the bricks in half, I would have also set up a jig to cut those tips off. Also, I would like to see the stove just a bit bore rockety, so when i get a chance, if we happen to get a warm spell, I will add another 12 inches to the barrel height which will allow me to stack the riser another 5 courses higher.
https://onedrive.live.com/?cid=373bc244e577ab46&id=373BC244E577AB46%21655&action=Share&v=3
The tick to sawing the bricks in half is EXACTITUDE. I used a table saw with a 10 inch diamond blade from home depot (about 20 bucks) do not buy the really expensive ones) Set up a "sled" that you can build a jig on to hold the brick exactly in place. make the jig so that you can make minute adjustments as to angle and the exact spot where the cut begins. Try it out by first using a wood blade on the say, cutting 4.5 x 9 pieces of OSB (flake board) and then switch over to to the diamond blade using bricks. You are going to waste several of them getting the cut just right. (save the pieces though) when propoerly cut, you should be able to put either half of one brick with either half of another, and it will form an EXACTLY straight brick. Also ytou should be able to take a half of one brick and put it on top of the other half of the smae brick and they will be EXACTLY alike. Also, you shoud be able to form the halves oif the same brick into a perfect 90 degree angle using a metal square with no gap at all between the square and the brick when measuring either the insider or outside corners. It seems like a lot of extra work, but you will thank yourself when stacking up the bricks, if you use the octagon design, that all of the brick surfaces come together with just a slight amount of adjustment. (I forgot to mention, make absolutely sure that your table saw blade is set EXACTLY perpendicular to the table saw surface)