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Options for inbetween stone?

 
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I'm in the beginning deign stages of getting  furnace up before winter this year, and one this I have in abundance is Field stone, and a lot of sandy/gravely land.   I have some ability to shape he stone as well.  What I'm wondering is what is the best 'mortaring' option to use between stones and the exhaust tube?  I could use concrete or mortar, but that makes it pretty much impossible to service/remove etc.. so I was thinking gravel/sand but from reading up regular old cob may be the easiest, and one of the best options to use.

C.D.
 
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Location: Sierra Nevada foothills, 350 m, USDA 8b, sunset zone 7
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Hi Clyde,

I would use the dirt, or dirt enriched with some clay, or clay/sand mix if your dirt seems to not have any clay. In most cases you will find a pocket of good dirt for cob on a large property.
 
master pollinator
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I think people have been using a clay slip (slurry) for bricks. It makes the bricks into a single thermal mass.

For field stone, I would guess that the irregular surfaces probably mean bigger gaps, requiring cob to bond them together thermally and stabilize them in place.
 
Cristobal Cristo
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Location: Sierra Nevada foothills, 350 m, USDA 8b, sunset zone 7
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Slurry would only work if the joints were small, otherwise the high water contents of the slurry would cause cracking when drying.
 
Clyde Dale
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Cristobal Cristo wrote:Hi Clyde,

I would use the dirt, or dirt enriched with some clay, or clay/sand mix if your dirt seems to not have any clay. In most cases you will find a pocket of good dirt for cob on a large property.



There is clay in some spots, but you have to dig down a few feet - I recently put up 1500 feet of field fence and dug a lot of 4 foot post holes so I have a pretty good idea of what is around.  -Very- Sandy.  In fact, the back part of the property was used by a previous owner to mine and sell sand.  Clay is easy enough to get, however, and mix in.

CD
 
Douglas Alpenstock
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Clyde, I can't claim to be a mass heater expert, but from what I've seen (based on the clay I can get, and they aren't all the same) you are absolutely on the right track. The key is a contiguous thermal bridge that makes one single mass.
 
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Hi Clyde,

Welcome to Permies.
 
If you try to please everybody, your progress is limited by the noisiest fool. And this tiny ad:
GAMCOD 2025: 200 square feet; Zero degrees F or colder; calories cheap and easy
https://permies.com/wiki/270034/GAMCOD-square-feet-degrees-colder
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