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Ryan. Is this outside the home or inside? I am not sure I follow. As for the heat involved, most issues occur once over 600 degrees. Sounds like that is not going to be the case for you. Mortar itself is pretty heat resistant. Think about what chimneys are made of now. Brick and basic mortar and exposed to a fair amount of heat except and the firebox itself. Jeff was right, vertical mixes can do fairly well.
LOL, you could have asked this one earlier today when you placed the order!
Take care.
Don
Ryan, not quite sure either about the specifics of your work, but regarding heat resistance, coincidentally that`s what I`m doing right now, the use of firebricks, and a refractory mortar in both cases yours and mine, is the way to go about this. looking into topic, I`ve learnt that a mix of these proportions would be heat resistant:
1.5 parts portland cement
2 parts silica sand
1.5 parts perlite
2 parts fire clay
Thus what Don states above, which somehow corresponds with engredients of carving mix. Do not fire the work right after finishing. Let a week pass by, then start little fires with, newspapers, for a few days, before you give it the real hot fire, just to set the materials gradually, you know.
Ryan. Is this outside the home or inside? I am not sure I follow. As for the heat involved, most issues occur once over 600 degrees. Sounds like that is not going to be the case for you. Mortar itself is pretty heat resistant. Think about what chimneys are made of now. Brick and basic mortar and exposed to a fair amount of heat except and the firebox itself. Jeff was right, vertical mixes can do fairly well.
LOL, you could have asked this one earlier today when you placed the order!
Take care.
Don
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