The purpose of firebrick is to protect the insulation from being damaged by the wood. Thus, it's fine to leave your brick well below the top of your arch if the ceramic blanket will hold itself in place and you won't be stacking wood all the way to the top against the side. I have AOF in my arch, and the 2" square tubing (which is wrapped in 1/4" ceramic blanket) sits on the top row of firebrick with about 4" of exposed blanket extending up to the top rail the pan sits on, meaning my firebrick stops like 6.5" below the pan.
The material you use for your grate is less important than the design of your grate. As you can see from reading this thread, some have problems with angle and cast, while others believe one or the other is better. If you think about this from a physics perspective, heat rises. The fire may move the heat around a bit (especially if you are injecting high pressure air), but if you have a proper amount of draft, the chimney will literally be sucking the heat up and away from your grates. I have been around a campfire on 4" of ice on a lake at a skating party, and the ice under the fire barely gets wet, much less melting away. Steel takes a bit more than ice to melt/warp, so obviously something else is going on. If your grate has 1" wide slots for large chunks to fall down through, you will get a lot of heat under your grates. If you add AUF to that, and the airflow hits those large coals that drop though the grate, you have just made a forge, and no grate will handle that well. Thus, you need to minimize the size of chunks that fall through the grate. Angle layed side by side (vvvvvv) with a 1/8"-1/4" gap will keep the heat up away from your grate (the v fills up with ashes plus "rounds over," which keeps the coals well above the grate. Air under fire, whether natural draft or forced, will help to cool the bottom side of the grate, and the narrow gap is plenty to allow ashes to go down and air to come up.
As Cjadamec said, increasing the pipe for the chimney will help. As we all know, heat rises, and the warmer the air is the better it rises. A larger pipe has a larger volume to surface area ratio, which means the exhaust gases (aka smoke) gets cooled less than it will in a smaller pipe. Thus, it will rise faster. The hottest and fastest moving part of the draft is in the very center of the pipe, and it slows as you get closer to the cooler outside of the pipe.
AUF (air under fire) is a great tool, but without enough oxygen above the fire, you are literally blowing your wood out the chimney. I finished my steel arch 2 years ago a bit after the season had already started (yeah, planning ahead is good, and doing ahead is even better, [and hindsight is always easier than foresight]), and only had time for AUF. I used 2 high CFM computer fans and blew a lot of coal black smoke out the chimney. That black stuff is unburned fuel (ie wasted). I had an airtight arch (planning for AOF), and I had to run with the door open because, as you have read in that thread linked in post 1, my AUF was burning the wood, but it wasn't burning the gases generated as there was a severe lack of oxygen in the actual heat-producing part of the fire. I added AOF (air over fire) plumbing the following year, and switched from the computer fans to a bounce house blower I bought from fleabay for around $45. It was a fair amount of work, but the fire burns hotter, my boil is better, my stack temps went from 1200++ to 750-900, the jet black column of smoke that used to pour out of the stack is gone (it is actually unusual to see anything but heat waves coming out the stack), and of course the best benefit is that I use less wood. The only downside is listening to that raging inferno inside my homemade arch and wondering whether it might suddenly break out, but so far so good!
If you have an unlimited supply of wood (ie split and stacked by someone else at no charge to you), AUF will get you a hot fire (hotter than natural draft). AOF is generally more work (maybe more work than is worth it for a block arch), but the results are absolutely fantastic. I started on a block arch with the previously mentioned computer fans blowing from the front of the arch on to the base of the fire. It worked, and I made syrup. Gotta start somewhere!
Originally Posted by
jimmol
PS
This forum has too much information... This was originally a post asking about adding a grate to a block arch.
We've all been down that rabbit hole. And it's doubtful we'll ever get out! Be careful about spending too much time on here, or you and your money will soon be parted.
The Evolution
2015 - 2x4 flat pan on block arch, 2016 added dividers for continuous flow
2017 - 2x6 Sunrise Pan (4' Flue, 2' Syrup) on homemade arch with AUF, 2018 added AOF
2019 - Sunrise water jacketed bottler