I appreciate your videos. No gimmicks. No bs cartoon thumbnails. No rave music. And no pleads for ‘like and subscribe’. While I don’t personally do any cast iron work, i enjoy watching a skilled craftsman such as yourself.
My dads uncle Alan Forest was a black smith by trade and was very knowledgeable in metallurgy. He worked in the ship building yards during WW2 on the east coast of Canada, doing many types of different iron fabrication. He was very knowledgeable in working with coal forging iron work. After the war he returned home to the Maidstone area where he farmed and had a black smith shop and did work for the people around the country who came to his farm. Dad said he knew quite a bit of the old school ways and uses of how to make his own steel.
As my traďe was in ferrous and non ferrous work I have found this extremely interesting as I still have my own old tools of trade. You have possibly reignited my interest again.Thankyou
yeah mate, its been sitting in the "To-Do" bucket for a long time, while I get my lathe and mill rebuilds completed. Finally got those both in and working now, so have resumed work on the electric furnace build... czcams.com/video/kiWX_cyydqg/video.html I'm really itching to start melting down some of the piles of scrap around the place
I love your channel. You’ve taught me a ton. I’m always open to new info and you give plenty of it. Thank you for sharing with us my friend. God bless and stay safe sir!!!!
Fantastic video, great pics and awesome audio. I am just getting into casting and found this video really good so have subscribed and will back track now to learn more. Keep them coming
Very nice bit of work ! I protect my concrete floor with bats of fibre glass insulation instead of sand. It's a lot easier to clean up, but it creates a "no walk" zone. I always look forward to you video postings. Thank you !
Thanks for an excellent starter video.I once had the experience of watching a hand operation casting man hole covers.They were casual as hell but turned out a lot of covers. Lot of know how lost there.
You sir, are not only an amazing artist but a magician as well! Nice work on the vids. They are a task in themselves!! Thank you for sharing all your work! Very informative and enjoyable ❤️❤️❤️👍✅
I'm delighted to finally find someone who knows how to sand cast properly. I learned in Jr High, and have been annoyed with people on CZcams ignoring basics of the process. Kudos to you!
luckygen1001 yeah... Some years later, I went back to see if they'd let me use the facilities to make something for my wife. That's when I found out that I only had to the end of that school year. The next year they'd be in a new school that didn't have the shop facilities for pretty much any metal work. (Sigh)
We had foundry shop at Brooklyn Tech in 1957, but we only made the cope and drag with a wood pattern and never poured metal, except the last day the teacher poured aluminum.
Edwin Wiles It seems to be the way "education" goes these days. Forget the trades apparently. Well, somebody has to actually do the work! I learned sand casting - believe it or not - as a Freshman in high school. That was 1984 in Wolcott Connecticut, USA. They still had a full on wood working, metal, auto and printing shop and it was not a vocational school! My favorite classes by FAR! I would bet good money that those "shops" are long gone now. Sad.
@@JViello thinking about it, it really does seem to be that the local schools carry whatever skills training that the local job market needs. There were foundries and metal working businesses when I was in school, when those businesses closed or moved, there wouldn't have been any reason to teach the skills locally, so the school didn't include them in the plans for the new school building. Understandable, but it still sucks.
really well done. We need to see your burner and blower and pump design for the waste oil and diesel fuel burner for the furnace.... can you make a video on that ??
Great video and extremely interesting. Our technical college teacher gave us a memorable demo 40 years ago and scooped off the glowing slag and dropped it in a pile on the concrete floor behind where we were standing. and carried on with the demo. A few minutes later there was a load explosion behind us and we were showed with hot concrete and slag, as the laboratory floor blew out leaving a smoking crater and some of us with burnt holes in our trousers!
your videos are absolutely inspiring! i am getting into scraping but castings are expensive. now that i know you can make them at home with some throw away brake rotors and some motor oil / diesel,.i will definatly be looking into making a furnace.
Suggested something half as ingenious as your pouring machine to another CZcamsr and pretty much got called a loony. You've got yourself a really good setup! Just got to get mine off the ground.
When I was working as a ladle operator on steelworks, we used a mixture of water, diesel and compressed air to heat up the ladles. Started with diesel and compressed air and then we mixed in pressurized water in the burner .
What was the tank of propane in the background next to the blower fan? Pressurized waste oil. Working on vehicles in a small town, the guy who owned it needed heat in the shop. We place a 55 gallon drum outside, with a tire valve in the bung, after filling it, air pressure added. The draft tube went to 2" off the bottom, ran inside to a valve, but we dripped it onto logs in the double barrel stove. One load of wood would last all day. Boy, you could tell when the auto tranny fluid started coming in. It burns way hotter than just used motor oil. We could get 2 vehicles and 1 school bus inside & close the door, so it heated a large area, but we used a box fan behind it about 5' away.
In 1970 I mixed sand for the Arkansas foundry that cast molds to make parts for Coca-Cola bottle capping machines. They didn't even have the sand mix written down, just some guy told me once to take so much of this, of that, and of something else, wheelbarrow it over and dump it in the big mixer, let it run for awhile, then wheelbarrow it over to a pile near the casting floor. Of course I got the mixture wrong, forgot which sand got which amount, and ruined a half-day production. They still didn't write down the mixture anywhere, but I didn't screw up again. It was 120F inside the building, and I lost ten pounds down to 125 . I quit after a week, but only because the room mate with a car run off and left me on foot with no way to get to work. I had one paycheck, and a very painful swelling of one earlobe. I had to take a Greyhound home to Texas and parents and a family doctor who lanced the boil for free. So much for my first try at independence. Grrr.
How do you cast a semi large cavity? Like an engine case, specifically the old Lister CS engine case, large lower? I want to get to your power level and bring back the CS. thanks for your video
I used to work in a Foundry, MJ Allen. We made all sorts of stuff, I was a fettler but I enjoyed watching the blokes make the castings and moulds. When hand making moulds for cast Iron they would use a white, chalky looking liquid which they painted over the sand and it blocked up those grain holes that make the castings look rough. Unfortunately I can't remember what it was called but it's worth asking around, I'll see if I can contact the blokes I worked with.
I've been collecting brake rotors and wheel hubs for a friend who has a furnace that can handle cast iron. Working at a car dealership I have a virtually inexhaustible supply. :) My furnace barely manages to melt aluminum (but that was the design goal, burning wood scraps to melt aluminum), but someday I'll have time and room to build a nice one.
Try changing from wood scraps to ordinary barbecue charcoal... that’s what they used in the “Bronze Age”. And if you want to get really serious use coke
Really nice 👏, I use graphite sometimes but it's just to make really rough patterns release from the sand but it also helps Sarah there's a refractory surface against the facing singing as well and I'm surprised you had to Chisel out the sand in the webs but regardless it looks like it turned out great. I made a surface played a couple years ago and it did not turn out anything half as nice as what you got there
Great video. I have some time on my hands these days, bought a small furnace. I just changed the brakes on my buddy's truck. Looks like I have some experimenting to do. But first, I want to make sure I have a clue as to what I'm doing, and do it safely. Thanks for making this video. :)
Well... I never had to break the rotors. My furnace held a full ton of rotors with room to spare. And our flasks were about 6 feet long usually. I did not have that funny cart to wheel around my crucibles. I poured everything by hand and crucibles were measured to amount of iron needed for each casting Good job. Good video.
As a person has previously mentioned about your blast furnace, I would like to know how you built it and what you used for materials in the construction of it. Thank you very much for this video
Any thoughts on breaking up a cast iron bath to melt it for reuse? They're covered in enamel which I would not know how to remove other than manual chipping, but the baths themselves certainly have a lot of weight. Thanks for the instructional video.
Before I used a sledge hammer to break up a bath tub that air chisel that was on the video was used to chip of all the enamel. It was some of the best cast iron I have melted but was very time consuming to get the enamel off.
First pour I did at Carry Furnaces here in Pittsburgh, we had 5000 lbs of iron, most of it cast iron bathtubs. 3 days with a sledgehammer. Its excellent iron, and the enamel you don't get off just turns to dross you skim off. Just make sure you wear a mesh face shield and goggles man- those shards of enamel will shred you!
Wow it turned out really well! I was helping my father change his rotors and pads recently and thought what a waste it is to throw out or return the rotors. Now after watching this I see a reason to even keep the oil! Can't believe it required almost 11 quarts worth plus around 3 quarts of diesel but if it's recycled motor oil the diesel is cheap. Problem I see for me is getting setup in the first place would cost prohibitive here in Florida as there isn't a lot of industry in the southern US historically, so it would all need to be shipped quite far $$$.
$$$? They got's lot'sa cars with disc brakes in Florida don't they? My furnace shell was free, a really big old water heater tank. Made the furnace barrel and a 5" ring of it for the lid. A friend at a local cement plant gave me a few bags of out-of-date High temp refractory, (lines the huge rotary kilns that cook limestone into cement) I built a 20' radius swing crane and hung a small Harbor Freight 500 pound electric winch ($50?) under the I-beam on wheels, because my large crucible is just a 12" chunk of 8" sched.80 (3/8" wall) water pipe (it was a free cut-off and I've got several feet left) with a scrap 1/4" plate bottom and 1" square lugs welded on, to lift it out of the furnace. I lined it with more of that refractory. OK, that's my big non-ferrous crucible, I think I paid quite a bit for my large silicon-carbide crucible for iron. As much free, used motor oil in Florida as anywhere else right? Does $$$ mean $3? OK, I did pay nearly $100 for my new 160 Amp Lincoln buzz-box welder, back in 1960 or '61, but it's been paid for many times over. I just remembered, I used a brake disc from a Pontiac Firebird to lock the the crane I-beam swing 10' up on the mast, with rod to an over-center, (locking) handle below. And luckygen, I live in the California "High" desert, preheats my furnace feed. ;-)
I have an old vise that is cracked. I want to try my hand at gas welding it with cast rod. The only cast rod i can find is very expensive. Some people say to use piston rings. I was just thinking of this video and came back to it. I wonder if I could cut some longer strips close to the center and use the rotor material? I wonder if the alloy is too hard? Ill plan on doing a long post heat and cool down.
I was told my old Windley table would have sat outside in all weathers for one year for the iron to normalise before machining. Do you still have to do that?
I appreciate your videos. No gimmicks. No bs cartoon thumbnails. No rave music. And no pleads for ‘like and subscribe’. While I don’t personally do any cast iron work, i enjoy watching a skilled craftsman such as yourself.
Thank you for watching my video.
WOW! Aluminum is one thing, Iron is completely another ball park. Nice work!
Yes. Iron is...a whole 'nother league.
Glad someone appreciates.
I really miss to see your work! thank you very much for keep doing this! It truly inspire me! "Even do I only do Aluminium and some times brass!"
Nice to see you melting.
My dads uncle Alan Forest was a black smith by trade and was very knowledgeable in metallurgy. He worked in the ship building yards during WW2 on the east coast of Canada, doing many types of different iron fabrication. He was very knowledgeable in working with coal forging iron work. After the war he returned home to the Maidstone area where he farmed and had a black smith shop and did work for the people around the country who came to his farm. Dad said he knew quite a bit of the old school ways and uses of how to make his own steel.
As my traďe was in ferrous and non ferrous work I have found this extremely interesting as I still have my own old tools of trade.
You have possibly reignited my interest again.Thankyou
One of the best examples if not the best example of a well done casting on youtube from a DIY-er.
Enjoyed watching ,thanks for posting ,great recycling !
I have a stack of rotors waiting for my furnace to get finished to try this exact thing, thank you for sharing!
Are you still building an electric furnace?
yeah mate, its been sitting in the "To-Do" bucket for a long time, while I get my lathe and mill rebuilds completed. Finally got those both in and working now, so have resumed work on the electric furnace build... czcams.com/video/kiWX_cyydqg/video.html
I'm really itching to start melting down some of the piles of scrap around the place
Really long video dude. Make it more shorter.
"Make it more shorter." You can make your sentence shorter by saying "make it shorter". Then it'd be more better.
It was 40 minutes, showing the same actions being done six times. The comment has merit.
You Sir, are a gentleman and a scholar! A++++++
Mighty fine work and presentation!
I absolutely love that phrase. I don't know why but I do lol
I love your channel. You’ve taught me a ton. I’m always open to new info and you give plenty of it. Thank you for sharing with us my friend. God bless and stay safe sir!!!!
Always a pleasure and a privilege to learn from you!
We always learn the right thing with you.
Please do more video.
Best regards
Thank you for watching my latest video, there will be more videos in the future about melting disc brake rotors
Love the setup for poring solo.
yes! I need to make one of those rolling carts to hold bigger crucibles
I second that! Good thinkin.
Don't know how I ended up here watching this but thank you it was fascinating..
Fantastic video, great pics and awesome audio. I am just getting into casting and found this video really good so have subscribed and will back track now to learn more. Keep them coming
Very nice bit of work ! I protect my concrete floor with bats of fibre glass insulation instead of sand. It's a lot easier to clean up, but it creates a "no walk" zone. I always look forward to you video postings. Thank you !
Great video. Especially impressive was the rolling crucible-pouring device.
Agreed.
Thanks for an excellent starter video.I once had the experience of watching a hand operation casting man hole covers.They were casual as hell but turned out a lot of covers. Lot of know how lost there.
Very nice presentation, I like how you are keeping track with statistics and added them in the end of the video
You sir, are not only an amazing artist but a magician as well! Nice work on the vids. They are a task in themselves!! Thank you for sharing all your work! Very informative and enjoyable ❤️❤️❤️👍✅
That you for that.
I really like your one man foundry!!! I did that the same way in 1975....Tony
You know your stuff Chap , good seeing this type of knowledge on You Tube.
Good video Mate, enjoyed watching it alot. Just did a brake job and got me 4 rotors to melt down, thanks for the example.
I'm delighted to finally find someone who knows how to sand cast properly. I learned in Jr High, and have been annoyed with people on CZcams ignoring basics of the process. Kudos to you!
You are so lucky to learn foundry work at school. My school started teaching it about 4 years after I left. I had to teach myself everything.
luckygen1001 yeah... Some years later, I went back to see if they'd let me use the facilities to make something for my wife. That's when I found out that I only had to the end of that school year. The next year they'd be in a new school that didn't have the shop facilities for pretty much any metal work. (Sigh)
We had foundry shop at Brooklyn Tech in 1957, but we only made the cope and drag with a wood pattern and never poured metal, except the last day the teacher poured aluminum.
Edwin Wiles It seems to be the way "education" goes these days. Forget the trades apparently. Well, somebody has to actually do the work!
I learned sand casting - believe it or not - as a Freshman in high school. That was 1984 in Wolcott Connecticut, USA. They still had a full on wood working, metal, auto and printing shop and it was not a vocational school! My favorite classes by FAR!
I would bet good money that those "shops" are long gone now. Sad.
@@JViello thinking about it, it really does seem to be that the local schools carry whatever skills training that the local job market needs. There were foundries and metal working businesses when I was in school, when those businesses closed or moved, there wouldn't have been any reason to teach the skills locally, so the school didn't include them in the plans for the new school building. Understandable, but it still sucks.
Really interesting process,....
Thanks for putting up this video.
Fantastic video. Very detailed. I loved the camera angle while you were wheeling the molten iron in.
really well done. We need to see your burner and blower and pump design for the waste oil and diesel fuel burner for the furnace.... can you make a video on that ??
Hi There, Making mold was one of my first jobs I had out of high school...You're doing a good job,, Tony
Now it's time for some milling and hand scrapping! Great work!!
Great video and extremely interesting. Our technical college teacher gave us a memorable demo 40 years ago and scooped off the glowing slag and dropped it in a pile on the concrete floor behind where we were standing. and carried on with the demo. A few minutes later there was a load explosion behind us and we were showed with hot concrete and slag, as the laboratory floor blew out leaving a smoking crater and some of us with burnt holes in our trousers!
Full PPE. Well done flawless video presentation
your videos are absolutely inspiring! i am getting into scraping but castings are expensive. now that i know you can make them at home with some throw away brake rotors and some motor oil / diesel,.i will definatly be looking into making a furnace.
What is your startup procedure for a hot furnace,propane then blower,then oil ,like a cold start ,or will oil self ignite,then blower?
Thank you for your time and lesson. You my friend are a pro
Impressive work Sir! Lots of fun to watch.
Great content, so glad I found your channel.
Suggested something half as ingenious as your pouring machine to another CZcamsr and pretty much got called a loony. You've got yourself a really good setup! Just got to get mine off the ground.
I use it because it takes the weight of my aching back.
When I was working as a ladle operator on steelworks, we used a mixture of water, diesel and compressed air to heat up the ladles. Started with diesel and compressed air and then we mixed in pressurized water in the burner .
Ok master, good to see you again!
Your one person pour system is sweet!!
Awesome vid, now I have ideas for all the rotors I have laying around
Ah foundry work! Brings back happy memories of my student days at Loughborough.
get a grsnite baking board from a cook shop it;s cheaper !
I love your furnace, running on waste oil is super, do you have some video you could share on how you built it . I would really appreciate. Thank you.
What was the tank of propane in the background next to the blower fan? Pressurized waste oil. Working on vehicles in a small town, the guy who owned it needed heat in the shop. We place a 55 gallon drum outside, with a tire valve in the bung, after filling it, air pressure added. The draft tube went to 2" off the bottom, ran inside to a valve, but we dripped it onto logs in the double barrel stove. One load of wood would last all day. Boy, you could tell when the auto tranny fluid started coming in. It burns way hotter than just used motor oil. We could get 2 vehicles and 1 school bus inside & close the door, so it heated a large area, but we used a box fan behind it about 5' away.
Very impressive!!! Great work!!
first I seen your work and editing. Subscribed and like! Will use this as reference when I do similar with old propane tank and cer-wool.
I like your set, very clever man!
Thank you so much for the information. It is so helpful not t just have to start from scratch. Thank you for sharing from you amazing experience base.
In 1970 I mixed sand for the Arkansas foundry that cast molds to make parts for Coca-Cola bottle capping machines. They didn't even have the sand mix written down, just some guy told me once to take so much of this, of that, and of something else, wheelbarrow it over and dump it in the big mixer, let it run for awhile, then wheelbarrow it over to a pile near the casting floor. Of course I got the mixture wrong, forgot which sand got which amount, and ruined a half-day production. They still didn't write down the mixture anywhere, but I didn't screw up again. It was 120F inside the building, and I lost ten pounds down to 125 . I quit after a week, but only because the room mate with a car run off and left me on foot with no way to get to work. I had one paycheck, and a very painful swelling of one earlobe. I had to take a Greyhound home to Texas and parents and a family doctor who lanced the boil for free. So much for my first try at independence. Grrr.
Fascinating story.
Made you appreciate your parents, didn't it, lol.
It happens
Best story I have ever read. Everyone should know this story. It is beautiful, even the difficult parts. I hope you are well now.
Borrow money from parents, get a bicycle, pay parents back, keep the job.
Very impressive work! Thanks for sharing.
you are doing hard work in your own shop that is great thing you can do in your life and feel it all day
You make it look easy. Well thought out.
Do you have build steps for that furnace?
i'd love to get hold of one of those surface plates. great job!
Great video, thanks for sharing!
I am in love with the pouring system, I would like to see the design and build of that myself.
Excellent work
This was fun to watch, thank you.
Very cool! I like your pouring mechanism I see people who are literally 3 ft away from pouring and I cringe at the fact that anything can happen.
thank you for this very interesting video.
great stuff man.I can't wait to get melting again.
Did you build your forge? Im curious about the build and oil/diesel system. Haven't seen many being used but sounds like a cool idea.
i could listen to you all day, this stuff fascinates me...thankyou
1 more question. Do you know any at home Iron casters in Alabama USA?
I would like to watch how others do it in real life.
How do you cast a semi large cavity? Like an engine case, specifically the old Lister CS engine case, large lower? I want to get to your power level and bring back the CS. thanks for your video
exceptional video as always
I used to work in a Foundry, MJ Allen. We made all sorts of stuff, I was a fettler but I enjoyed watching the blokes make the castings and moulds.
When hand making moulds for cast Iron they would use a white, chalky looking liquid which they painted over the sand and it blocked up those grain holes that make the castings look rough. Unfortunately I can't remember what it was called but it's worth asking around, I'll see if I can contact the blokes I worked with.
Would love to know your equipment setup for melting iron
Got my sub after only a few minutes!
I've been collecting brake rotors and wheel hubs for a friend who has a furnace that can handle cast iron. Working at a car dealership I have a virtually inexhaustible supply. :) My furnace barely manages to melt aluminum (but that was the design goal, burning wood scraps to melt aluminum), but someday I'll have time and room to build a nice one.
Try changing from wood scraps to ordinary barbecue charcoal... that’s what they used in the “Bronze Age”. And if you want to get really serious use coke
You always make it look so easy mate!
Welcome back! I am hoping that we all can see some more videos from you.
Really nice 👏, I use graphite sometimes but it's just to make really rough patterns release from the sand but it also helps Sarah there's a refractory surface against the facing singing as well and I'm surprised you had to Chisel out the sand in the webs but regardless it looks like it turned out great. I made a surface played a couple years ago and it did not turn out anything half as nice as what you got there
wow thanks for sharing learned a lot, like your cart , beats lifting it
Loved it. Very nicely done sire. Best Wishes & Blessings. Keith Noneya
Great video. I have some time on my hands these days, bought a small furnace. I just changed the brakes on my buddy's truck. Looks like I have some experimenting to do. But first, I want to make sure I have a clue as to what I'm doing, and do it safely. Thanks for making this video. :)
One thing is for sure there is no shortage of them.
Fantastic work. It always amazes me how you manage to melt iron in your back yard.
It still amazes me that I can melt iron in my backyard.
@@luckygen1001, modest!
Cool thanks for the tips. We're do buy the stuff you mix in to the cAst.
Well... I never had to break the rotors. My furnace held a full ton of rotors with room to spare. And our flasks were about 6 feet long usually.
I did not have that funny cart to wheel around my crucibles. I poured everything by hand and crucibles were measured to amount of iron needed for each casting
Good job. Good video.
so do you have to grind it back or chrome dip in acid?
What do you do with a large chunk of cast iron like that??
what did you use for a curstable for you foundry
Absolutely brilliant work,one day -------
As a person has previously mentioned about your blast furnace, I would like to know how you built it and what you used for materials in the construction of it. Thank you very much for this video
how do you add the fuel mixture to the burner?
nice video!
Any thoughts on breaking up a cast iron bath to melt it for reuse? They're covered in enamel which I would not know how to remove other than manual chipping, but the baths themselves certainly have a lot of weight.
Thanks for the instructional video.
Before I used a sledge hammer to break up a bath tub that air chisel that was on the video was used to chip of all the enamel. It was some of the best cast iron I have melted but was very time consuming to get the enamel off.
Wouldn't the enamel simply melt off and float as dross?
First pour I did at Carry Furnaces here in Pittsburgh, we had 5000 lbs of iron, most of it cast iron bathtubs. 3 days with a sledgehammer. Its excellent iron, and the enamel you don't get off just turns to dross you skim off. Just make sure you wear a mesh face shield and goggles man- those shards of enamel will shred you!
Thanks Andrew.
Pain In the ass , leave the tub as a tub , I've done it lol , not worth the effort and danger
Wow it turned out really well! I was helping my father change his rotors and pads recently and thought what a waste it is to throw out or return the rotors. Now after watching this I see a reason to even keep the oil! Can't believe it required almost 11 quarts worth plus around 3 quarts of diesel but if it's recycled motor oil the diesel is cheap. Problem I see for me is getting setup in the first place would cost prohibitive here in Florida as there isn't a lot of industry in the southern US historically, so it would all need to be shipped quite far $$$.
Florida is hot all year so the last thing I would want to do is melt cast iron. I live in the cold part of Australia.
$$$? They got's lot'sa cars with disc brakes in Florida don't they? My furnace shell was free, a really big old water heater tank. Made the furnace barrel and a 5" ring of it for the lid. A friend at a local cement plant gave me a few bags of out-of-date High temp refractory, (lines the huge rotary kilns that cook limestone into cement) I built a 20' radius swing crane and hung a small Harbor Freight 500 pound electric winch ($50?) under the I-beam on wheels, because my large crucible is just a 12" chunk of 8" sched.80 (3/8" wall) water pipe (it was a free cut-off and I've got several feet left) with a scrap 1/4" plate bottom and 1" square lugs welded on, to lift it out of the furnace. I lined it with more of that refractory. OK, that's my big non-ferrous crucible, I think I paid quite a bit for my large silicon-carbide crucible for iron. As much free, used motor oil in Florida as anywhere else right? Does $$$ mean $3? OK, I did pay nearly $100 for my new 160 Amp Lincoln buzz-box welder, back in 1960 or '61, but it's been paid for many times over. I just remembered, I used a brake disc from a Pontiac Firebird to lock the the crane I-beam swing 10' up on the mast, with rod to an over-center, (locking) handle below.
And luckygen, I live in the California "High" desert, preheats my furnace feed. ;-)
You can also use old brake drums too.
Yes.
truck brake drums especially, 100+lb each
what sort of fuel are you using fore the cast iron?
I have an old vise that is cracked. I want to try my hand at gas welding it with cast rod. The only cast rod i can find is very expensive. Some people say to use piston rings. I was just thinking of this video and came back to it. I wonder if I could cut some longer strips close to the center and use the rotor material? I wonder if the alloy is too hard? Ill plan on doing a long post heat and cool down.
Here I wondered how much fuel it takes for a job like this; thank you for keeping notes.
A press with a vee or ball bearing pressing insert might break the rotors more easily than grinding.
I don't have a press but could use a hydraulic jack instead.
I was thinking that my 25 ton log splitter could work
I just bash em with a 4 lb drilling hammer. I often do it on accident removing seized ones for replacement.
A sledge hammer would work well, with proper clothing and equipment of course.
I casted at multiple jobs doing lead now was doing steel in Alabama an casted counterweights for forklifts great cast very clean too
Boy do I need to get crucibles big enough for that. Small crucibles just won't do for my project
Very Very interesting and enjoyable to watch
Don’t know why but haven’t seen your videos for a while. Anyway glad to be back and learning from you.
Holy shit... That's 1 hell of a forge!
I was told my old Windley table would have sat outside in all weathers for one year for the iron to normalise before machining. Do you still have to do that?
Great video. Whenever I see a large crucible of molten metal I can't help but wonder what a horrible mess would occur should the crucible break.
How do you go about measuring the temperature of molten cast iron? IR?
I use a pyrometer to measure furnace temperature and the metal temperature is 100C-150C lower.
Good video, thanks for sharing
Well that's a new one 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼
Hello from Gering, Nebraska. What is the difference between the two irons you did in the wedge test? Is it melting point, toughness etc?