Mr Volcano Refractory Satanite (10 lb) is a high-temperature mortar designed to seal and protect ceramic fiber blanket and create a smooth, durable hot face in gas forges, heat-treat ovens, kilns, and similar high-heat tools. With a 3200°F working rating and a simple brush-on mix, it gives you a tough lining that resists erosion without adding the thermal mass of heavy castables.How it’s used (quick start):• Pre-wet the exposed blanket, then mix Satanite with water to a creamy, brushable consistency.• Apply two thin coats, letting each coat dry thoroughly.• Cure slowly with short, low‐heat firings, increasing time in small increments to drive off residual moisture.This thin-build approach preserves fast heat-up while giving your insulation a protective hot-face layer.What’s in the bag: 10 lb Satanite refractory mortar (powder). Mix with water for use. PPE recommended when handling refractory materials.Typical Solutions People Use → Cons → How This Product Solves ItRigidizer only on ceramic blanket:Cons: A rigidizer will harden or stabilize the fibers but typically does not provide a robust wear-resistant hot face designed for repeated flame contact, and may be limited in temperature rating.How Satanite solves it: It adds a true refractory hot face layer over the blanket with a working rating of 3200°F, providing abrasion resistance and flame durability rather than just fiber stabilization. Stove/furnace cement or generic mortar:Cons: These are often designed for masonry or metal-furnace joints, may be limited to ~2000°F or less, can be brittle in thin coats over fiber, and aren’t optimized for ceramic blanket surfaces.How Satanite solves it: Purpose-built for coating ceramic fiber blanket, offering the higher temperature rating, the proper consistency for thin brush-on coats, and designed for this use rather than just patching brick. Dry flue-tile refractory mortar:Cons: Intended for brickwork and flues, typically rated lower (~2550°F), not designed for thin coating over fiber insulation, and may compromise insulation performance when used incorrectly.How Satanite solves it: Higher temperature rating and formulated as a thin build mortar for fiber use; preserves the blanket's benefits (light weight, fast heat-up) while giving you a protective hard surface. Castable refractory lining (thick, structural):Cons: Adds significant thermal mass, slows down heat-up times, requires thicker build, heavier structure, and may not be ideal for small shop forges or fast cycling equipment.How Satanite solves it: Provides the same protective hot face in thin-build form, allowing you to retain the fast heat-up and low thermal mass benefits of ceramic fiber blanket while still protecting it effectively. No coating (raw blanket exposed):Cons: Exposed ceramic fiber blanket is vulnerable to abrasion, hot-gas erosion, fiber damage, and, importantly, fiber release which can pose serious health risks (see next section).How Satanite solves it: Creates a sealed, hardened surface that encapsulates the fiber blanket, significantly reducing fiber exposure, dusting, and surface wear — making the lining much safer and more durable.Health & Safety Emphasis: Why Coating or Rigidizing MattersHandling or using raw “blanket” ceramic fiber (also called refractory ceramic fiber, or RCF) is not risk-free. Studies by National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) document that workers exposed to RCFs had increased respiratory symptoms, reduced lung function, and pleural plaques in manufacturing settings.Further reviews note that RCF is classified as “possibly carcinogenic to humans (Group 2B)” due to animal evidence of lung tumors and mesothelioma in high-dose exposures. Another review from the EU warns that inhalation of airborne RCF fibres and dust may increase risk of lung cancer and other chronic lung diseases.Users in hobby blacksmithing communities also recognize the risk of exposure when blanket is left unsealed.Bottom line: even though hobby exposure may be lower than industrial settings, it makes sense to act with caution. Sealing or rigidizing the blanket *and* coating it with a durable hot-face mortar increases safety and reduces the chance of airborne fibres, dust and long-term lung risk.Strong Recommendation: Use Mr Volcano Rigidizer FirstBefore applying Satanite, it is highly recommended to treat your ceramic fiber blanket with Mr Volcano Rigidizer. Rigidizer helps to stiffen and stabilize the fiber blanket, lock down loose fibers, reduce dusting and make the surface more uniform for the subsequent mortar coating. The workflow becomes: Install the blanket properly. Apply rigidizer and allow it to cure/dry per its instructions. Then apply Satanite in the thin-coat process described above.This two-step process ensures you get the long-wear hot face performance *and* the added safety benefit of lower fiber release and dust generation.Pro TipsWear proper PPE when handling ceramic blanket a