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100%Rubber Soul was always my favorite album, an impossible choice to make. They finished the transition from pop to rock icons that started in Help!. Fantastic song structure, chord voicings, melody, harmony, lyrics, the whole package. Rick Beato has a good ear for those arpeggios.
Rubber Soul is definitely on my desert island album list.
That is interesting to learn. And very timely, because I have to replace the fire bricks in my woodstove.Plagiarizing a post by user byQ 2014 hearth.com. I knew there were different firebricks but this is more in depth.
quote:
I'm building a masonry heater and I've did some research on firebrick. What I learned is firebrick generally comes in 3 or 4 duty statuses. The higher the duty status the more metal (alumina, up to 99%) and less sand (silica). The lower status firebricks will have like 20% metal in them and 80% sand. The more metal in the brick the better, right?
Not necessarily. The super duty/high metal bricks don't expand and contract very well - they form little fractures within the bricks. Wood stoves heat up and cool down so these bricks may not like this. They do better if they get very hot and stay hot (like in an incinerator). However these super duty bricks won't pit out like some of your bricks are doing. Your bricks are low duty firebricks and probably contain about 20 to 25% metal in them. They aren't very tough but with the higher sand content they expand and contract well so they won't form little fractures within them.
The best firebrick? Probably a medium/high duty firebrick - which contains about 35-55% alumina (metal). This brick will not get the little internal fractures and it won't pit out as fast from friction. Generally, the higher the duty status of the brick the higher the cost. If you are in the midwest Whitacre Greer (20% metal brick) and Alsey refractories (the smithfield a medium/high duty firebrick) are the go to firebricks for many masons.
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