Hi Bill,
I cast the sections of my burn chamber using Densecrete 145 Castable which I bought from the Australia supplier at this site:
http://www.darleyfirebrick.com.au/castables.html
For refractory insulation I used Litecrete 1280 from the same supplier. Of course you will not be buying from this supplier but you could look up the site to get an idea of the specifications of the products I used.
I cast the burn chamber in five pieces because each piece was small enough that I could bake it in our home oven. Bigger pieces would not have fitted. I went further than that and took the baked pieces to have them professionally fired but the operator declined to do the job in case he did it incorrectly.
I then went ahead with the assembly on the basis that the pieces would be fired when the heater was being used. I took the precaution of lighting a couple of small fires before doing a full burn.
I would certainly recommend casting the burn chamber in a number of pieces as a monolithic structure will have no give and take. I butted each piece against the next piece and used kiln cement in the joins that I obtained from the Big Ceramic Store USA.
I would recommend making molds for each piece with very smooth surfaces. I followed the manufactures instructions in mixing the refractory and I vibrated the mixture in the mold. I allowed the pieces to cure for a couple of days and then put them in the sun to dry out before baking them for about eight
hours.
I would recommend building the burn and secondary chambers inside a steel jacket to hold everything together. The steel jacket will also prevent leakage of gas in the event that you do have some cracking. I used about one and half inches of refractory insulation to fill the gap between the refractory
pieces and the steel jacket.
I would recommend that you build your heater in modules so that if one component fails it can be replaced or repaired without having to rebuild the whole heater. Extensive use of isolating valves for the storage water is useful as having to drain hundreds of gallons of treated water is a pain.
The burn tube in my heater has walls about one inch thick. The structure if strengthened by the refractory insulation and steel jacket that surrounds it.
I think you will have a lot of fun and satisfaction in building your own heater. I know I did.