Backyard Iron Casting

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Backyard Iron Casting

Viewing 9 posts - 1 through 9 (of 9 total)
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  • #519027
    PatJ
    Participant
      @patj87806

      I tried casting 356 aluminum, brass, boat shaft bronze, and gray iron to make steam engines.

      The aluminum was ok if tempered to an approximate T6 level, but lacked much mass.

      The brass and bronze generated a lot of zinc fumes, and I had to wear a powered respirator. The castings did not turn out well.

      I finally tried casting gray iron, and after some experimentation, I got that figured out.

      This was my first iron pour.

      I had no idea what I was doing at the time, and safety was a bit lax with the laced shoes and such.

      I have come a long way with safety and casting techniques since then.

      I recently switched my videos to Vimeo, and so I am not positive the link will work.
       
      This was a number of years ago (2012 to be exact), and my driveway no longer looks quite like that junkyard in the video.
       
       
       
      .

      Edited By PatJ on 11/01/2021 08:46:37

      Edited By PatJ on 11/01/2021 08:47:03

      Edited By PatJ on 11/01/2021 08:48:38

      Edited By PatJ on 11/01/2021 08:49:48

      Edited By PatJ on 11/01/2021 08:51:14

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      #34463
      PatJ
      Participant
        @patj87806
        #519041
        Ady1
        Participant
          @ady1

          Your iron casting looks pretty darned good

          Don't forget, this is alchemy and there are a lot of secrets

          Dan Calkin took his aluminium casting techniques to the grave

          China tried to do backyard metal in the 60s cultural revolution and wound up with forest decimation and millions of tons of poor quality pig iron, base metal is usually best done on a large scale with very quantifiable ingredients

          foundrywork is a highly skilled subject

          GL

          Edited By Ady1 on 11/01/2021 09:55:17

          #519146
          PatJ
          Participant
            @patj87806

            Thanks, I appreciate the kind words.

            I contemplated making iron castings for many years, but never considered it achievable in a hobby setting.

            In 2012 I discovered that gray iron can be cast on a hobby level.

            It took me a few years to perfect the method, but I now get consistent results in gray iron without hard spots, inclusions, or other defects.

            Good information about how to cast gray iron is very difficult to find anywhere, especially how to do it with an oil burner. I could never find the coke that is required to run a cupola.

            So I have tried to leave a paper trail about how to cast gray iron and get good results every time.

            Gray iron makes for some really nice model engine parts, and I can control the quality of the castings and the patterns, so if they are not right, I have nobody but myself to blame.

            I think I posted these photos previously.

            r2-img_5030.jpg

            rimg_5050.jpg

            rimg_5088.jpg

            rimg_7826.jpg

            #519155
            noel shelley
            Participant
              @noelshelley55608

              Well done ! That flywheel looks really good. If you want some info on doing brass PM me. Noel.

              #519174
              PatJ
              Participant
                @patj87806
                Posted by noel shelley on 11/01/2021 17:39:23:

                Well done ! That flywheel looks really good. If you want some info on doing brass PM me. Noel.

                Thanks. Yes I would like some info on casting brass. It would be nice to be able to cast that material, but there are some tricks to use, and I don't know what those tricks are.

                .

                #519176
                Martyn Edwards 1
                Participant
                  @martynedwards1

                  In a past life I used to do a fair amount of Aluminum casting and found that car pistons from the scrap yard often produced the best results.

                  #519180
                  DMB
                  Participant
                    @dmb

                    Cover the surface of molten alloys with charcoal to prevent evaporation of the zinc. Scraper to get rid of it just b4 pouring. Lid on crucible. I think there is a least one alternative to charcoal, could be limestone.

                    HTH

                    #519192
                    PatJ
                    Participant
                      @patj87806
                      Posted by DMB on 11/01/2021 19:03:42:

                      Cover the surface of molten alloys with charcoal to prevent evaporation of the zinc. Scraper to get rid of it just b4 pouring. Lid on crucible. I think there is a least one alternative to charcoal, could be limestone.

                      HTH

                      Great information.

                      Thanks much.

                      .

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