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Post by brocken on Nov 1, 2014 15:22:56 GMT -8
The clay in the ground here is "blue clay." It's so hard that you need an excavator to get it up out of the ground. I have resorted to using fire clay enriched with other ingredients, masons high heat mortar and 9x2x4 fire bricks rated for 3000 degrees from Industrial Fire Brick in Wyoming, Michigan. Andy is a pleasure to work with. I have dealt with Andy before and he was a lot of fun. He gave my boy a tour of the warehouse and a few samples of materials to boot. I haven't used them yet as another project always comes up. Hope your build goes well. Dave
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JJ
Junior Member
Posts: 56
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Post by JJ on Nov 4, 2014 17:46:00 GMT -8
The clay in the ground here is "blue clay." It's so hard that you need an excavator to get it up out of the ground. I have resorted to using fire clay enriched with other ingredients, masons high heat mortar and 9x2x4 fire bricks rated for 3000 degrees from Industrial Fire Brick in Wyoming, Michigan. Andy is a pleasure to work with. I have dealt with Andy before and he was a lot of fun. He gave my boy a tour of the warehouse and a few samples of materials to boot. I haven't used them yet as another project always comes up. Hope your build goes well. Dave He's awesome. Love him to death! Thanks I am assuming your are in Michigan?
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Post by brocken on Nov 5, 2014 6:44:15 GMT -8
Yes, on the west coast by Grand Haven.
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