Theresa Zelazny wrote:Can rocket mass stove technology be applied to firing ceramics? Has anyone tried this, if so how?
Wow, this was from 2013! So I will attempt to upload a pic. I'm located in Chehalis, WA and a noob to this pottery thing, too. We just moved to a new place and I have so far a few.different types of clay around here on the property.
1. On my hill, lots of sand, iron oxide so yellow. Quite sticky. Not so awesome for making pottery, but makes excellent cob. Mix in a little hay and it's good to go. I made a rough kiln pit of this over a 3 ft deep hole in the ground dug out of the same stuff. The fires I built in it make the surrounding hole into terra cotta. It holds water like a pot. Just is crumbly, hence not.good.for pottery. The hay in cob solved the crumbly issue when using it to build my kiln. Acts as "rebar" to make it stay together long enough to burn hard.
2. My earthenware type.clay, excellent for pots, grey in color or sometimes iron oxide yellow. It is in little pockets on a hill in my field and is almost pure.
3. Brown stuff lower down in the field that has lovely, fine powder texture and feels so smooth for working with in making pots, but it cracks so badly and disintegrates in fire. Apparently too much organic matter. I even added grog, and it's a big nope. Sigh... it makes such fine details in things like little roses...
4. Stuff in the creek, grey or yellow iron oxide. Like No. 2 just harder to get to and more gravel in it.
So I made the pottery, made the kiln, and I can at the very least bisque or make terra cotta. I don't have a thermometer yet. Is there an affordable one anyone recommends? Was looking on Amazon. I bought some low fire simple clear.glaze and a white shiny one as well from Amazon. Haven't gotten the kiln to glaze pieces correctly yet, just make pottery, but then the kiln clay isnt all the way dry yet and smokes out the many cracks on top. I have burned 3 fires in it so far, drying the kiln itself a d testing one little cup w glaze on it. The kiln top is a good 4 feet away from the fire, with the racks that the ware sits on being dispersed in between, and I fill the whole 3 ft hole below with fire. It is so hot it is difficult to stand there and look how things are going when I crack the door open. The door is currently a piece of galvanized metal.from an old garbage can, not the cement board in the picture- at least until I get aomethimg better. Have to argue w hubby on everything, including how to make the dumb door on a mud kiln! The top of the kiln, which is 2 inches thick in clay cob.. is hot enough on the outside that it's too hot to touch,
but not glowing on the inside or out, just down in the firepit up to ground level glows red. I had some loose metal greenhouse hoop material (steel? it has memory and doesn't bend easily, 4" gap wire metal mesh, see pics) inside that I slapped the cob onto for structure... some was sticking out on the inside of the kiln here and there, and while it did not burn off, it did melt significantly and sag down.
I think it's safe to say its a plenty hot fire for pottery. Still working the bugs out. I pit fired things also in that 3 ft hole before I built the cob kiln on top and it glowed red and made pottery, but I had problems with accidentally breaking the handles off of my coffee cups when adjusting the wood and stuff. As far as glaze goes, one side would.glaze correctly,.and the other side would be matte colored still- uneven heating even though I buried the stuff in coals. At the cost of my cup handles, sadly. But this is all a learning curve. I was using my wood stove in the house, too, with similar issues. I can see that I'm gonna have to slap.clay on that thing 3 or 4 inches thick and put some kind of sealer on it for the rain. Have worked with cob a bit now, and at my former house. Found out that on an indoor woodstove, cob makes.an excellent insulator and makes a fire VERY efficient burning, no waste, just ashes. Also, cement can cover it, but be careful bc cement and clay shrink and absorb moisture at different rates. Where it wasn't quite so.close to the actual stove, like the backstop part, I brushed on cement w a paintbrush in layers w no issues and I had a surface I could use, like put a teapot on or your wet mittens, cat slept on it... But closer to the heat, it would crack bc of the different shrinkage rates. Also learned that cob corrodes your wood stove and chimney very badly, so if you want to keep the metal nice, then maybe don't put it right on the metal. Use a wire frame and build it a half inch put away from it or so. I did a dome over the top of the wood stove (a large tile on the actual top of the stove bc In sure that metal top.glowed.good and red) in cob with a tiled flat surface on top of that that I kept a teapot warm with. And inside the dome I baked bread and made.casseroles or fried things in a cast iron skillet. Cob insulates VERY well on a fire source.
My goal is cups and bowls you can drink out of, that's it. So.if anyone has recommendations for glazing or a temp gauge, I'm all ears. Burnishing is a major pain in the butt. I hope this post doesn't get lost in the archives. Google doesn't seem to care how old it was. lol
My.next attempt, hubby bought me a large terra cotta flower pot and we are gonna try putting that over a piece either setting on that rack, or down in the hole and build the fire all on top of it and around it.
I have seen videos of.native pottery where they put the piece inside a metal oil barrel, put sticks on top of it, set it.on fire (and somehow it does not neat up too fast and break) , and then add more sticks, then leaves to make it blacken (chimes off the oxygen from the fire). They build a fire underneath the barrel, which has a few holes in the bottom to catch the kindling inside. A piece of sheet metal covers most of the top. The guys name is Joe... something on YouTube, traditional Cherokee Native potter.
So it can be done, I guess it just takes some finessing.