thank you so much for showing concern about too much water or too wet. actually it was the requirement of the project and the heating oven we made 6 years ago is perfectly working fine and there are no cracks or any defect if you check other video you will understand properly.
Basically they started messing up from the jump and then made a mess the end. Should have started with water and if there is 2 people one start mixing and the other add the dry mix till its the consistency you're looking for. If using all bagged dry mix (no wet sand added) you can get it down to the exact amount of water to the exact amount of dry. Once you do this add the water then ads the dry and mix. One guy can mix a bucket in 30 seconds.
Use Home Depot prism tile grout or any of their tile mortars with calcium aluminate. Better yet is any tile grout from Mapie or their fast set tile mortar. Add in some fire clay/kaolin, silica sand and kyanite, (all cheap available at any pottery store ) and you have a refractory mortar for half price. Or again pottery store get a bottle of sodium silicate. Use 3 part silica sand, 1 part kyanite, 1 part kaolin then mix in sodium silicate until mix is consistency of butter. Half the price of air dry refractory mortar
Mix clay with foaming agents in a cement mixer and you'll have a cheaper alternative to aircrete or furnace cement. Furnace cement is basically clay, but aerated and more lightweight. It has to be aerated so R-value will be greater than clay alone.
totally senseless... all of you are making no sense, hardly a saving on any of these moves that is worth the trouble unless you are building these things for a living. For 99% of the population this useless
we are using refractory cement specially made for high temperature furnaces ratio it depends on the application as fire bricks can absorb lots of water so we mix it with extra water consistency you can say 1 portion of cement mixed with 2 portion of water. there is no extra material added you can see the final result in our latest video we made a high temperature oven using the same method thanks
Sorry when i made this video i had no intention to share it on youtube. But if you have any question you may ask I will glade to answer. For the mixing ratio it depends on the application where you want to use it.
Acme Brick sells one gallon tubs of this stuff in stiff form and you add water to the consistency of heavy cream, dip the bricks and lay brick to brick.
thank you so much for showing concern about too much water or too wet. actually it was the requirement of the project and the heating oven we made 6 years ago is perfectly working fine and there are no cracks or any defect if you check other video you will understand properly.
i came here for some info. i got nothin...
Hahahahahaha
Basically they started messing up from the jump and then made a mess the end. Should have started with water and if there is 2 people one start mixing and the other add the dry mix till its the consistency you're looking for. If using all bagged dry mix (no wet sand added) you can get it down to the exact amount of water to the exact amount of dry. Once you do this add the water then ads the dry and mix. One guy can mix a bucket in 30 seconds.
So that was 6 handfuls of mix to 1.78 gallons of water?
How do the bricks stick on the sidewalls when it’s soup? Same as nailing jello to the wall
What do you fill the joints with after?
Use Home Depot prism tile grout or any of their tile mortars with calcium aluminate.
Better yet is any tile grout from Mapie or their fast set tile mortar. Add in some fire clay/kaolin, silica sand and kyanite, (all cheap available at any pottery store ) and you have a refractory mortar for half price.
Or again pottery store get a bottle of sodium silicate.
Use 3 part silica sand, 1 part kyanite, 1 part kaolin then mix in sodium silicate until mix is consistency of butter. Half the price of air dry refractory mortar
I came here to learn something. I learnt a whole lot of nothing.
Hi! Can I used cement for building of house instead?
It is a high temperature cement used for furnaces or oven construction for normal building you can use ordinary cement but the with less water
@@diyextreme1 thank you!
You are welcome
Are these ratio’s by volume or weight?
You glossed over the part about mixing with a drill, paddle and bucket, need about 5 more minutes of footage.
Hi. Should one use High-Temp mortar with sand only to use as a liner for a hobby kiln to melt Aluminium?
Of course, it's basically like mixing grog in clay to keep pottery from shrinking.
Mix clay with foaming agents in a cement mixer and you'll have a cheaper alternative to aircrete or furnace cement.
Furnace cement is basically clay, but aerated and more lightweight. It has to be aerated so R-value will be greater than clay alone.
totally senseless... all of you are making no sense, hardly a saving on any of these moves that is worth the trouble unless you are building these things for a living. For 99% of the population this useless
Like Great Stuff foam?
what foaming agent? Surfactant? what mix ratio?
What are the ingredients?
Let me know the mixing ratios please...???
we are using refractory cement specially made for high temperature furnaces ratio it depends on the application as fire bricks can absorb lots of water so we mix it with extra water consistency you can say 1 portion of cement mixed with 2 portion of water. there is no extra material added you can see the final result in our latest video we made a high temperature oven using the same method thanks
You should of used more water
🤣
Is it soup yet?
Hahhaha now it has become a part of the high temperature oven how we used video is also available:)
???? Could have been better,i would have hoped for some more explanation,rather than a fast beat music and silence.
Sorry when i made this video i had no intention to share it on youtube. But if you have any question you may ask I will glade to answer. For the mixing ratio it depends on the application where you want to use it.
DIY EXTREME I bought this cement for a wood fire oven. I need to know if I need to mix some clay with to apply on the outer surface of the oven
Yes you need to add some sand
Acme Brick sells one gallon tubs of this stuff in stiff form and you add water to the consistency of heavy cream, dip the bricks and lay brick to brick.
SOUP!
Can this cement used for aircrete or CLC?
Of course.
That's way too wet 😅😅
Worthless video, at least it was less than two minutes
These boys waste a lot material and make one hell of a mess...
اين اجد الاسمنت هذا
Add the water 1st putos
Absolutely worthless.