Q.
What are the differences in firebrick and insulating firebrick?
A.
Firebricks – heavy dense fire clay bricks
About the heavy dense heat resistant firebricks, standard size or other firebrick products of different shapes. There are two types of firebricks where each is produced from fire clay. This page deals with the heavy fire brick kind which absorbs the heat into its mass very well. Firebricks have an excellent thermal conductivity plus heat withstanding properties under prolonged use and diamond cut off wheel is required to change their shape. Firebricks are called by various names, find out about that...
Some may confuse them with insulating lightweight firebricks, those are used in different applications. Dense firebricks can be cut only with diamond wheel attached to high speed handheld angle grinders, on an ordinary building brick saw or sliding drop saw for cutting bricks. Fire bricks can be chopped in half easily by using brick chisel and a couple of hits with a heavier hammer. It is fun and quick but may you want to achieve precise nice cuts hire a trade machine or buy yourself at least small size grinder. Before cutting soak the brick in water by dipping it in a bucket of water or in a wheelbarrow if you had too many. Leave the bricks in that water for 5 minutes minimum.
What firebricks type to use?
When it comes to fire-bricks and dense refractory products composition content often Alumina (AL) ingredient is looked at which ranges ordinarily between 18% to 40% of alumina in modern product’s body. The percentage range is important for choosing the right product for the right temperature or
Apart higher cost, additionally, higher Alumina content grades make these bricks harder and brittle (more glossy if you like) making them absorb less steam e.g. from under pizza dough bases being cooked or bread dough. However one can get used to cooking in such oven fast.
Insulating fire bricks
Watch out for their details as the insulating fire bricks, the soft and lightweight refractory bricks, are NOT the hard dense and heavy firebricks. Due to those many empty air spaces in the brick body, insulating firebricks will not absorb nor conduct heat nearly at all, thus they have a very specific application purpose.
Use of light weight fire brick insulation is broad, mainly in industrial and hobby kilns heated up with either electric spiral elements or gas burners, furnaces, both for hot face lining or outer back-up heat insulation.
IMPORTANT:
Do not confuse lightweight insulating fire bricks with heavy dense firebricks. Insulating bricks are refractory too and of coursewithstand very high temperatures range BUT for purpose they have very low thermal conductivity and don’t absorb the heat well at all.
Ref:
http://www.traditionaloven.com/articles/84/firebricks-heavy-dense-fire-clay-bricks
http://www.traditionaloven.com/articles/81/insulating-fire-bricks