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Bacon Lee wrote:Thanks a lot Erik for your explanation and advice. My have another concern please help : I made walls of concrete brick all 4 sides of the bench, the back of the bench, the two head ends, and the front of the bench. I wonder would the heat be able to go into my room from the front of the bench. Somehow I got that the bricks are to prevent heat loss, which means bricks will prevent heat to go out of that confined compartment, right? I am right or wrong here please? If so, then the heat can not get out of that box and get spread out in the room. Do I have to remove the all of bricks in the front of my bench?
Thanks a lot Erik
so we use bricks, rock, and clay, etc. heheh.
Bacon Lee wrote:
1) The sand for the cob bench, what kind of sand should I use? They have #1 sand and #2 sand which is expensive. They have fill sand which already has some clay in it, and it is cheaper. Should I have fill sand?
Basically, in the bench you've built it won't matter anyway, because you framed it in brick, which will offer support. And to what degree the grades of sand matter, really? Good question. In theory, sharper sand cuts and holds to the clay better than smooth river sand. But I'm using river sand in my mixes because I have a big pile of it in my yard. If that pile were sharp sand, I'd use that
I would use the cheapest sand you can get. I may be mistaken, but I just don't think it is a critical point. Sharper is better than smooth, but cheaper trumps both!
Bacon Lee wrote:
2) How much sand per clay? One person told me 1 clay and 3 sand, right?
hehheh
I read of someone who visited a barber and got the hair sweepings. So far I have been using cellulose, because I have it. I haven't gotten any straw yet, and I don't relish whipping it into small lengths. And I'm honestly not likely to get dung and let the horse or cow do the chomping into small bits for me (although that is a time tested traditional technique, and adds to the strength of the cob, from what I've read - something about the digestive process).
Bacon Lee wrote:
3) I went to the Clay Planet to get Lincoln 60 for the cob bench, and they said they are out of Lincoln 60, they told me to get Lincoln 8, would Lincoln 8 be ok,
Bacon Lee wrote:
4) Someone said that when make the bench, we can not fill it all and finish it in one shot, we have to do it by layers, fill up couple of inches then wait for a few hours. Is it true? If so how many inches should I fill and how long do I have to wait for the next layer
In *my* case, it may very well be a couple inches at a time, followed by a break! heheh
Not good bench behaviour!
Success has a Thousand Fathers , Failure is an Orphan
LOOK AT THE " SIMILAR THREADS " BELOW !
Bacon Lee wrote:
Thanks a lot to all of you kind and knowledgeable people. it's a nice surprise to see you guys are know so much and you are kindly taking your time explaining things. Thanks a lot
I hope you don't mind I have further question:
1) How do I test for percent of silt in my clay? I use lincoln 60 and some lincoln 8. Does any one already know their percentage of silt?
2) On the top surface of the bench after I finish, what if some time down the line someone pours some water on the bench. Would the clay be running and making a mess? What do you do about the top of the bench so it will not make a mess when contact with water? Can I have a thin layer of cement on top of bench to make sure it will not making a mess
Again thank you very much
But look up forums that discuss finishing cob. The idea is to add to the basic clay-cob mix so that it can take bumps and hard hits without cracking, bending instead of cracking, and will include shedding water, instead of becoming a gooey mess.
Bacon Lee wrote:I have some more questions please
1) How do I test for leak in my duct work? Just look with my eyes to see if there is any smoke?
2) Why should I wait until fill with some clay to test for leak in my duct work? It is easier? How?
3) Should I test now, burn the stove and look to see if any smoke came out somewhere?
It is a new shiny toy! Gotta play with it!
On the serious side, I want to know right away if there is a drafting problem, or gaps letting smoke out into the room. And I have to think these are easier to address before claying everything up.
Bacon Lee wrote:I have some more questions please
1) How do I test for leak in my duct work? Just look with my eyes to see if there is any smoke?
2) Why should I wait until fill with some clay to test for leak in my duct work? It is easier? How?
3) Should I test now, burn the stove and look to see if any smoke came out somewhere?
Glenn Herbert wrote:I looked up Lincoln 8, and it is basically the same as Lincoln 60 but with more iron in the mix (it came from a higher-iron section of the mine). It will work excellently for all purposes in RMH building. If you were to make pottery with it, it would be a bit browner with possibly more dark specks on the surface.
The number associated with a particular fireclay may (not must) relate to how coarse it is. Lincoln 60 has only particles that will pass through a 60-mesh screen - 60 wires per inch. There is a variety called Greenstripe 200 which is produced by a different process and has only 200-mesh and smaller particles. This would actually not be advantageous for our purposes, as the larger particles (still clay, not silt) make a stiffer mix that is less likely to shrink on drying.
Another common fireclay in some areas is Hawthorn 40, which is a bit coarser than Lincoln 60, and works especially well for cob ovens according to Sheffield Pottery.
The Hawthorn mines are in Missouri I believe, while the Lincoln mines are in California, so that will affect regional availability.
Bacon Lee wrote:
Thank you all, and I think I will use lincoln 60 and lincoln 8 assuming they are the same. I will try to make my bench around 15 inches. I will leave the bricks on all 4 sides, I already bought them any way. I don't understand much but I am tired of keep learning because it seems like learning forever.
But I need to have one more question please: What do you mean by draft problem? What is that?
Success has a Thousand Fathers , Failure is an Orphan
LOOK AT THE " SIMILAR THREADS " BELOW !
Success has a Thousand Fathers , Failure is an Orphan
LOOK AT THE " SIMILAR THREADS " BELOW !
heheh, so that is why I say, I think your fire riser is too short. *I* would suggest buying a second barrel, getting the paint sand blasted off of it (or burned off, or sanded off; just get it off, how doesn't really matter; and do the same thing for the existing barrel -- yes, I too groaned and moaned when I tore my previous rocket stove apart, so I could take the barrels to get them sand blasted, but I believe it was the healthiest choice, it is not healthy breathing the fumes from the paint burning off, nor perhaps whatever was stored in the barrels, try as I might, I was unable to wash all the residue out of my barrels).
I'd like to see the fire brick in side the existing barrel.
Bacon Lee wrote:
1) You was right, the inside of my barrel also painted. Not the same kind of paint from the outside, but it is kinda clear-red color. Maybe the paint makes the smoke black?
• Instead of sandblast it, is it ok too if I burn it with a torch (That way I don’t have to undo my stove)? If so how long should I burn?
• Oh, and what’s about paint remover? This one has very good review: http://www.homedepot.com/s/paint%2520remover?NCNI-5
• Or what if I burn the stove for the whole day, would that take care of the paint?
It is dark now, but tomorrow I will open the lid and video the inside so you can see. I am afraid that it’s all black and hard to see. Last time I look inside, it’s black I think because of the smoke.
I haven't actually done that, perhaps someone who has can speak to the details. For example, it may be enough to bubble the paint really well and then scrap the rest. Bear in mind that the fumes are not likely to be healthy, so stay out of them as best you can, lot of open doors and windows, and if you start getting a headache or feel bad, get out into fresh air, and try another plan for paint removal.
Bacon Lee wrote:
2) You are right about he high of the heat riser too. The high of the heat riser is 27 inches, I have the half bricks by their width look just like the feed tube, but 6 layer of ricks instead of 3. The feed tube, I cut only one one brick (on each layer), so the length and width of feed tube are not the same: the length is 9-1.25= 7.75, while the with is 9-2.5 = 6.5. With the heat riser I did cut 2 bricks (on each layer) so that their length and width are both 6.5. Just look at my feed tube while read this, you will picture it easy.
• So, the heat riser is double the high of the feed tube (6 layers instead of 3 layers). Am I ok or I still have to make my heat riser higher by connecting the second barrel con the second one?
Bacon Lee wrote:
3) About protecting the floor, my goodness, if the floor crack, can I get some cement and fix the crack rather than undo the whole thing? What a big job to undo the whole thing. I am trying to avoid undo it. Would you please think of something else instead of undo it and protect the floor.
• In stead of burning 2 hours straight, can I burn only 1 hour each time and burning it everyday. So that the burning chamber will not be that hot, that way I don’t have to undo everything to protect the floor?
Bacon Lee wrote:
4) Since you said one brick felt into the riser which scare me. I remember when I burn I hear something in the barrel. Tomorrow with the sun light to see better, I will open the lid to see if something happend.
Bacon Lee wrote:
5) The first time I burn, I also already put the barrel on and cover and all pipe hooked up.
Bacon Lee wrote:
6) You are right about the weather. Today when I burned, temperature is 62F.
Bacon Lee wrote:
7) I already bought the heat seeker to measure temperature of the stove. Tomorrow I will open the barrel to see what happen inside make a video clip and then if everything is fine, I will burn the stove and taking temperature at different spots
Bacon Lee wrote:
Did I answer all questions. All you doctor of rocket stove, please further reconsider and give me different prescriptions for my rocket stove. Undo the whole thing is so painful
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