After one or two years of delay after delay, I finally built a home made tandoor today. My objective is to do this as cheaply as possible, both in terms of the cost of materials and the effective cost of land taken up. I decided to build a 'portable' tandoor using bricks which are easy to erect and easy to dismantle after a cooking session. I don't want such an ugly item as a tandoor to have a permanent place in my garden.
I'm relaying some paving slabs down an alley at the side of my house at present, so seized the opportunity to use the land there. Who needs a special base made of fire bricks? I decided to scatter a bit of sand to help level things out and start building on soil/clay with no special base at all. Could that have been a mistake. not having a 'proper' base? I doubt it, but read on...
I'm using magnetite bricks from a couple of old electric storage heaters. They stack up quite well owing to the square edges and they are obviously designed to be happy with heat. The total cost of ALL my materials for the tandoor was about GBP5 and most of that was petrol to go and collect the storage heaters from a friend. I also decided to add a blower/fan system to provide a bit of air flow. The six small fans came friom old computers and can be powered from a 12 volt car battery.

Here's the finished item, which took about 1.5 hours to 'design and build'.

I'd started it off with newspaper, twigs and small dry branches. Flames leapt out of the top and I feared the fence might catch fire. Then I added 2 bags of charcoal (10Kg) and eventually it quietened down and all the charcoal seemed to be making a contribution. Most of the activity was near to the air intake vent, not surprsingly.

I put a lid on top with insulation (not pictured) to try and build up heat but my oven thermometer indicated a temp of only around 250C after 2 hours, even in the lower half of the oven. Perhaps the storage heater bricks 'suck out' too much heat. HestonB said on TV that he used 10 bags of charcoal to get the temp up to his target of 370C using refactory bricks, I think he said. That's crazy! 10 bags would normally cost about GBP30. I paid 75p each for 2 bags in an end-of-season sale.
First I tried cooking chicken tikka on a long rod I'd made to resemble the type of thing the BIR's use. This cooked for 10 mins, not far above the charcoal but was only just cooked. All the signs are that I have failed to produce anywhere near sufficient heat. How can that be with 10Kg of charcoal glowing away, with a turbo fan, and the lid on to retain heat? Anyway, the tikka was fine but no better than if I'd cooked it on my gas cooker.
Next I tried cooking some naan bread. It stuck to a marble slab I'd dropped into the oven, to provide a clean, flat surface, but it simply would not cook. It was a joke. Back to the drawing board...total failure. Here's a photo after the dough had been in the oven for about 10 minutes!

I'm going to rearrange the bricks into a completely different layout, add some insulation all round and try again.