Thank you, Frosty.
The short answer, because we can! Haha. Yes, more of a proof of concept to test the viability of a concrete shell, or for an increased R value castable, water set refractory like Kastolite. I was wondering about the dragons breath around the outside.
I have a stainless serving tub that's ~9"W x 6"T x 12"L I am planning to make with an internal dimension of 6"W x 4"T x 7" L (168 cu in). I plan to use 2 inches of 2600 8# ceramic blanket, rigidized and covered in~ 1/2" of Kastolite 30. This is all based on other posts in the Forge 101. The tub would have the ends cut for the openings, and a floor made to cover the " top opening" of the tub (which becomes the bottom) with the floor fixed to the lip of the tub and secured with a strong base and hearth in front and behind the forge.
I currently have a coal forge I've been playing with to get started, enjoy it, and have back burned the gas forge for now (pun intended?), but will build this once I have more funds to work with. I estimated it would cost about $200 for my BOM with extra material leftover for future projects.
The Aircrete was just a recent musing and wondered if anyone here played with the concept for a forge.
I did not know that water set castable refractories did not have a binding agent. I know they are not cement or mortar, but I thought there was still something that would stabilize the material until it was fired.