The following article is a supplement to the article Refractory Core Construction sequence 2006.
The article illustrates the introduction of a masonry baffle into the lower portion of the
normally straight wall of the fire tube behind the ovens rear slab.
The addition of a baffle at this location is in my opinion a considerable amelioration to the original design.
Also illustrated is the cross bonding of the courses in the corbelled ceiling of the fire box as it rises
opposite the baffle - and the protection of the ovens back slab from thermal shock.
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Prior to building a baffle into the fire tube wall behind the oven, this wall was built straight up
from the top of the fire box to the capping slabs as seen here. |
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View up through the fire box cealing showing rear wall baffle. The oven slab has been retracted about one inch behind the last corble, and so is not visible. The capping slabs have not yet been installed. |
![]() Copyright Pyromasse © 2008, all rights reserved. |
![]() Copyright Pyromasse © 2008, all rights reserved. |
The diagrams show the addition of the corbelled baffle in the wall opposite the corbelled fire box ceiling. The drag from the corbelled courses on the baffle cause additional turbulence and so mixing,
and promotion of secondary ignition. If the wall is straight the passage of the smoke over
it is much faster and almost un influenced by turbulence. The corbelled courses of the baffle also add more mass and greater wall thickness to an area of intense heat. With the oven opening in the rear face, this added mass relieves some of the immediate heat stress from the archwork of the facing over the fire box opening. The flame rising up against a straight wall will always have a layer of, insulating, air between it and the wall as it rises. The baffle will cause the flame to be thrown back and grip the wall as it rises, increasing heat transfer. The corbelled courses of the baffle raise the total interior surface area by the area of their exposed horizontal surfaces. Heat transfer on the upper surfaces must though be impeded by the rapid accumulation of Fly ash during each fire. The baffle causes a narrowing of the smoke path to a throat, just before the fire tube, reducing the amount of partially mixed gases entering the tube. |
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The following images are all of the same project, with the oven opening in the rear face of the core. The brick are Vesuvius, France Non Spall. layed in Mount Savages Super High Mull. |
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Two courses of brick are layed over the angle bar before the first corbelled course of the baffle. |
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All 5 corbelled courses of the baffle. |
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The third corbelled course of the fire box ceiling. |
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The fourth course of the fire box ceiling. |
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The fifth corbelled course. |
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The sixth course of the fire box ceiling corbel, and the fifth course of the baffle. |
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View of the core at the fifth and final course of the baffle. |
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The seventh and last corbelled course of the fire box ceiling. The rear wall of the fire tube is now one brick thick. |
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View up from in side the fire box. The baffle is to the right, the corbelled ceiling to the left. |
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This is an additional course to lock the seventh corbelled course in place. This course forms the bottom of the ovens underhearth channel. |
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The throat, or entrance to the fire tube. The baffle is to the left. |
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A closer view of the throat. |
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The rear slab of the oven is no longer directly in the line of the flame, its lower edge being protected by the last corbelled course and the course above it. |
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On some of the shorter cores where the bottom edge of the back slab has been
exposed to direct flame bite, I have seen some vertical hairline cracking in the middle of the slab. |
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View down the fire tube into the fire box.
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The upper chamber of a core with out oven, before being closed with the capping slabs (seen from the side). |
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This example shows the baffle built in to the rear wall of the core, as opposed to the front wall of the core in the example illustrated previously. In this core the ovens opening is in the front face above the fire box opening. |
Marcus Flynn
Montreal 2008