Got the straight grooves cut in 5 of the firebricks.
Used this to keep things aligned / a hold of safely / dust control.
The cute thing about it is, I sized it for a tractor supply company brick. Then added about 1/8th of an inch just in case bricks were different size. Get to menards bricks - and that 1/8th wasn't enough. Had to sand it down some to get'em to fix - and for the TSC brick, had to use some felt to keep it held true.
The picture is of it 'upside down', normally the brick would be facing down with the wood covering it.
I used felt to avoid scratching up the top of the table saw.
The first groove cut. It works. Yay!
Something went wrong during this cut. This was in the TSC brick that was just a bit shorter than the menards bricks - so it quite possibly got just a hair catty cornered. Or maybe it hit a hard spot. Or the blades got too hot or something. It took *forever* to make the cut - and as you can see it was melting either the brick or the blade material.
When I started the next cut after letting things cool for 15min - it got about 1/2 inch in and started doing it again. Stopped, unplugged saw, changed the order of the blades, viola - back to smooth cutting.
The straight groove bricks (5 of them, 5 grooves each) have been cut. Yay!
Sadly, when I started to inspect the burnt brick above - I noticed that I had somehow munged the measurements. Which is really weird. I was checking each measurement 3 times tonight. Anyhoo, it caused me to need to change the other cuts just a bit.
This means that when it comes time to do the terminal brick (to connect all the grooves into a spiral) - I'll have to change the push block i've made for each and every of the 5 primary cuts on it (angles are all different). Kind of a pain in the ass
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It took about 4 hours to cut those 25 grooves. A large chunk of that was trying to sand down the jig thing and dealing with the burnt brick situation.
Tomorrow:
* need to bevel the groove side long wise of each of the 5 straight bricks (fast to do)
* need to also bevel the terminal brick
* figure out the lines for getting the spiral connections in the terminal brick (gonna measure not 3 times tomorrow, but 4(!@%$(!@%)!@%)
* groove out the spiral connections in the terminal brick
* groove out the two straight half/partial grooves of the terminal brick (one for each end of the element) ... this will be weird i feel.
* drill press the terminal holes in the terminal brick
* get the terminal holes drilled in the sheet metal shell (gotta carefully align stuff)
After all of that - in general terms, it'll be getting the element and terminals in place as well as the rest of the electronics... then mixing the refactory cement and ramming up the pieces. From there... it'll be the week to dry out the refactory and a day to do initial firing.
I'm thinking that week of waiting while it dries out would be a great time to start taking apart the dryer for powder coat oven stuff as well as ball mill (for greensand) thoughts with it's motor (and/or drum) etc.