![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
To All:
It's easy. YOU CAN DO IT. The basic idea is to line a steel drum or barrel with refractory material such as fire brick, mortared together with fire-clay, sand and refractory cement. That will get you a BIG smelter, one you'll probably NEVER USE. So start with a SMALLER steel drum. Get yourself a 'boat' -- something in which to mix your refractory CEMENT. You aren't going to use any fire brick... except mebbe for the bottom. You want the bottom to be about two inches thick and solid refractory material. Pumping up a good flame, the temperature will approach three thousand degrees Fahrenheit. And that is one hell of a fire, pard. Get yourself some CARDBOARD. Quite a bit of it. You are going to ROLL the cardboard until it has the OD that you want. The OD must match the OD of your CRUCIBLE plus about two inches per side. So go find yourself a crucible. But keep in mind, if you're smelting aluminum you DON'T want it in contact with any iron or steel. It will be 'poisoned' and turn out brittle (!) (Yeah, I didn't think so either. Trust me, it'll crack like glass.) Now you CAN use iron or steel... so long as you DIP your crucible in a refractory COATING before you charge it with lumps of aluminum. Just mix up the refractory coating about the same as pan-cake mix, then dip the pot in it, let it drain, then dry, the BAKE to cure it. All cured? Then dip it again. In fact, dip it about three times. Last time is the charmer. Make sure it has no cracks and that you haven't scraped through the dip at any point. Now you can bake it. Pretend it's just another piece of ceramic art. It won't be, because you'll have a couple of tangs stick out through it which you have CLEANED OFF every time you've dipped it. Then put it in the furnace to bake. Patience is your pal. Go do something else whilst baking your refractory mix. What's a good mix? I used fire-clay and a patent 'refractory cement' -- some black sh.... stuff that you mix with water. I added fire-clay to that and ended up with a thick, grey slurry. I dipped and let it air-dry twice, then threw some charcoal into the furnace, light it off, got the charcoal going good then propped the crucible over the coals. I didn't pay a lot of attention to the inside of the crucible. It was a solid, seamless coating. I made the pot out of steel tubing 4.5" in diameter and about 9" high. The bottom was a piece of 3/8" thick steel plate, MIG'ged to the pipe. I cut a couple of bolts down to 1" length measured from under the head. I made two sets of tongs, one to lift the crucible in & out of the furnace (lid is off, the thing will flat FRY you unless you are protected by at least two layers of leather... and more is better). Furnace has a 2" hole in the side down low; lid has a 2" hole in the middle (was a tin can until I poured in the refractory stuff, mixed with lotsa fire-clay and #80 silicon sand. You see some guys using tongs six feet long and you laugh. Don't. Not until you've had a pot full of molten metal in your grip. You got goodd shoes? And I'm not talking K-Mart. Good LEATHER shoes. Plus leather OVER them to act like a rain shield, in case you slip and spill a little. Once you pull the pot out of the furnance you'd damn well better know what comes next... you can't stand there hold it with one hand while scratching your ass, trying to figure out what to do. Mine, I gotta sit it down. So I have a Sitting Down Place. Concrete. Dry. Pouring Tongs just beside it. Sit down the crucible, pick up the Pouring Tongs, pick up the crucible, move mebbe six inches... prolly less, there's the flask, ready & waiting. Pour. Hell of a note.. Steam. Smoke. Fumes. Flames. You're inside of it all, standing there, pouring. Nice & steady. Pouring. That's your job. Pour the molten metal outta the pot into the flask. Pouring. At just the right speed. Fill it right up. Fill up the mold and the tower and the top of the flask. And you'd better have made damn sure you got enough metal to fill the mold. All done? Okay, swing the crucible over HERE and pour any excess into those ingot molds. Shouldn't have any excess but some is better than none. Now swing the crucible BACK to the Sitting Down Place. Sit it down. Put down the Pouring Tongs, pick up the Lifting Tongs, put the crucible back into the furnace. Close the lid. Now you can think about other things. Lemme give you a hint. If you've never cast nothing in your life before, DON'T start with this. Start by casting some fish weights outta wheel balance weights. Start with casting balls for your cap & ball rifle. Start with anything OTHER than a bucket fulla aluminum. Because there's a lot of little details that can scar you for life. And you only get the one chance to learn... that FIRST time. It helps if you got someone there who'se done it before, kinda breathing down your neck. FIRST time, do something EASY. Rudder pedals. "VP-II" cast right into them suckers! -R.S.Hoover |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Lyc IO-540 won't make RPM. | [email protected] | Owning | 12 | December 14th 06 10:21 PM |
Why didn't the Cessna 337 make it? | Dallas | Piloting | 90 | June 5th 06 02:29 AM |
How much does a CFI make? | Peter Gibbons | Piloting | 27 | August 17th 03 02:48 AM |
Hope you can make it to our Fly-in | Gilan | Piloting | 0 | August 16th 03 03:05 AM |
$$$'s make right? | Sydney Hoeltzli | Piloting | 9 | July 15th 03 04:54 AM |