Thursday, February 19, 2009

Mud Oven/waterheater




Oh, to bake the bread and have a bath...Stick Fired Mud Oven

and Hotwater Heater in progress..will it work? Is it too much to

ask to bake Bread AND have a Bath ?

Time will tell...we will never run out of sticks here so if this

works it will be a good prototype for The Real House

( and with any luck might keep us fed and clean during the

Mudworks involved in building The Real Thing!)



step 1. I started on the ground (after removing roots and

vegetative debris from the site) with a Tire* whumped full of

gravel ( lots of gravel, lots of whumping- an Earthship would require alot of this kind of stuff- my

limitations are becoming apparent...but part of the caper is Testing Procedures, well that's one

tested!) The piece of tin at the back will hold up the cob as it builds- it is secured to a huge fallen

log so it will need an insulating layer to make sure the wood can't heat up when the oven is fired.

*I know tires are flammable but this one will be well and truly encased in mud and, having faith

in the fact that heat rises, I fondly hope the tire will remain as cool as the proverbial cucumber

throughout the making and the baking.

Step 2. Using rocks that will take the heat ( not the Mathinna Mudstone which is native to my

bush block and explodes fiercely when heated) I built up a foundation for the cob walls of the

oven as well as supports for the 'found piece' which will make the oven (see picture) and to

hold the boiler for the hot water. ( temporary stand visible in the picture) I have used 'light

straw '( straw coated in clay slip) to insulate the floor of the fire box-I wonder if the straw

will stay good once the oven is fired? It is used as insulation on the outside of ovens in books and

i'm still a bit keen on insulating the tire from any heat that might forget to rise? There will be

additional layers of cob and mud plaster over it in any case...also a layer of fire ash between any

metal parts and the cob which as i understand will let the metal expand without cracking the

cob?

Design principle as i 'get it' (from books again) is to make sure the

firebox slopes uphill towards the flue and narrows in diameter

as it does so. I have mudded in a holey brick at each side of the

firebox to make sure the fire can draw. So far the path of the fire

does a 'dog leg' where the boiler is which is how a Russian Stove

works- utilizing almost all of the heat from the fire by virtue of it's

meandering path so that the flue (in a properly build example)

should be only warm- in this case i guess the proof will be in the

pudding- another mudmix curing for the next episode ( rather

like 'Wheelbarrow Pudding'- who said if you can cook you can

build?! Something else to Test as i can definitely cook- they don't call me 'The Pancake Queen'

for nothin...) I am using Becky Bee's Cob books as a guide here and my new hero is Nadir Kahlili!

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