Smelting Iron in a Bloomery Furnace!

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 7. 09. 2024
  • My first iron smelt! Using the bloomery furnace I built in the last video, it was time to get a smelting. I had about 40-50 pounds of grinder dust, forge scale, lathe chips, and various metal dust from my workshop to process back to into usable material. It even worked!
    Soon I'll post a video of refining the bloom steel into usable material and hopefully making something out of it! Whether I make it into a knife or another blacksmithing project, I'm sure I'll learn a lot.
    Full livestream: • Birthday Iron Smelt!
    My Website, contact me for commissions/etc!:
    www.BennettMar...
    My instagram, sneak peeks of what's next!:
    / bennett_the_smith
    My Patreon, help me stick it to the man!:
    / bennettthesmith

Komentáře • 38

  • @BatJeff
    @BatJeff Před 3 lety +2

    Criminally underrated channel. Found your videos a few days ago and have binged all of them. So interesting.

    • @BennettTheSmith
      @BennettTheSmith  Před 3 lety +1

      Ah well, I don't do music over timelapsed footage that obscures what I'm actually doing and release two videos a week so I can plug mobile game sponsorships, so I guess I'll never make it big :P I'm ok with that.

    • @BatJeff
      @BatJeff Před 3 lety

      @@BennettTheSmith 2 months later and still loving the videos. Keep it up!

  • @marcinsmazik753
    @marcinsmazik753 Před 3 lety +2

    Happy late birthday! You'll get it next year ;-)

  • @theRobzie
    @theRobzie Před 3 lety +1

    happy late birthday mate from the UK, looks like I missed out on a good time, I always love when people go back to the old ways of doing stuff and try out how things were made for centuries before modern tech took over. Anyway great stuff, all my support for ya, keep doing what you're doing ;D

    • @BennettTheSmith
      @BennettTheSmith  Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks! It was a blast, though next time will be even better. I'm already collecting more ore and a better mic and camera setup will make a big difference.

    • @mattbanks3517
      @mattbanks3517 Před 3 lety

      @@BennettTheSmith you can get high puritiy iron nickel copper by taking iron rich dirt, centrifuging it to remove organic matter, roasting the sand and cooking it with HCL Muriatic acid for 3 hours at 95 celsius. This will dissolve all iron as fecl3, calcium as cacl2 and gamma alumina as alcl3 (main component of antiperspirant deodorants). The silica will not dissolve and phosphorus will be dissolved as phosphoric acid and calcium hydroxyapatite. The dissolved salts can be based (neutralized) with limestone caco3 or caoh, the cacl2 will stay dissolved. The feco3/feoh and aloh3 along with the copper carbonate/hydroxide and nickel carbonates/hydroxide will precipitate, pump out the water and wash the precipitate a few times with water to remove any residual phosphoric acid, cacl2 and then add a small amount of na2co3 to neutralize the last phosphoric acid, hcl and fecl3 and alcl3 that may be left to yield soluble sodium phospate and nacl table salt + co2 gas. Roast the percipitate and reduce it with hydrogen at 1100 celsius or carbon or syngas/woodgas. To have cleaner steel if you are reducing with carbon, grind the charcoal and wash the ash out with hcl, or vinegar.

  • @AnonymousYT-oy8fm
    @AnonymousYT-oy8fm Před 2 lety +1

    nice

  • @jazzbot7307
    @jazzbot7307 Před 3 lety

    Ive commented this before but Ill say it again, this channel is incredibly underrated. You should upload more to feed my dopamine addiction xD
    P.s Happy belated birthday buddy :)

    • @BennettTheSmith
      @BennettTheSmith  Před 3 lety

      Thanks :D I'm working on it! I've got a lot in the pipeline, this damn pandemic just keeps tripping me up. The amazing SLOW-FAST where despite being incredibly busy, weeks go by where seemingly nothing... happens.

    • @jazzbot7307
      @jazzbot7307 Před 3 lety

      @@BennettTheSmith Yeah I feel that. In Australia, and in particularly my state, we have been in lockdown for almost 9 months. It's been so fucking long and yet it feels like yesterday that I was at work, but then it feels like a lifetime ago I went to that festival in Feb.

  • @TheUGRap
    @TheUGRap Před 2 lety

    So cool dude

  • @jamesmclane2826
    @jamesmclane2826 Před 2 lety

    Really awesome video😊😁👍✊️

  • @akashasausuke5249
    @akashasausuke5249 Před 3 lety

    Go with Kevin 👍

  • @zacharykirby6248
    @zacharykirby6248 Před 3 lety

    Dude bravo 👏🏻 getting out there and testing the waters. I bet you learned a lot. Looks like a ton of work too! Crazy to think that men did that enough to smith entire armies worth of armor back in the day. Oh, and happy belated 🎉

    • @BennettTheSmith
      @BennettTheSmith  Před 3 lety +1

      No kidding! I guess when you've got nothing else to do but die of plague and maybe a game of stick and hoop, you've got lots of time for grueling manual labor! Seriously though, learned TONS.

    • @zacharykirby6248
      @zacharykirby6248 Před 3 lety +1

      @@BennettTheSmith plague death doesn’t sound too bad 🤷🏻‍♂️ but there’s no blacksmithing post death, i assume, so definitely not an option. Hope to see a 2nd attempt at this to see how you improved. No time soon i’m sure. But still!

  • @esben181
    @esben181 Před 3 lety

    The fact that this was a live stream is so cool.
    Where do you stream?

    • @BennettTheSmith
      @BennettTheSmith  Před 3 lety +1

      I've only streamed to youtube so far. Haven''t done many more due to recurring internet issues at my workshop, but its getting better! I'll probably do another ... soon. ish.

  • @timoverschuren2165
    @timoverschuren2165 Před 3 lety +1

    Orlando bloom didnt make it to the final cut? ahhhhh

    • @BennettTheSmith
      @BennettTheSmith  Před 3 lety

      Haha! I forgot about that one, must have missed it in the edit.

  • @garhy123
    @garhy123 Před měsícem

    Is it possible to wait until it is liquid ?

  • @KaueZX19191
    @KaueZX19191 Před 10 měsíci

    Valcano

  • @pnwprospecting
    @pnwprospecting Před 2 lety

    Did you do a spark test when they cooled

    • @BennettTheSmith
      @BennettTheSmith  Před 2 lety

      Yep, basically no carbon anywhere I tested. probably less than modern mild steel. However, when I consolidated it, it etches with a ton of layers, so maybe I should spark it again. Some of the layers sure etch like they have different carbon content. I definitely lacked sufficient flux in the form of silica sand - especially since I wasn't using raw ore.

  • @trollingmodeactivated2500

    May i ask if you got any advise on how to heat treat a knife that i forged out of the top part from a railroad track? Or should i jus heat a test piece cherry red and give it a go with motor oil to see if itl work

    • @BennettTheSmith
      @BennettTheSmith  Před 3 lety +1

      A test piece is probably best, too many possible variables to account for. What I would say is make a long test piece, if you can, and heat it on one end so that when you quench it, there are a range of temperatures. Then you can more quickly test to see what will work by checking the hardness at several points.
      If you have the option, I prefer to use pre-heated vegetable oil. Motor oil smells awful and I have never seen any research supporting the theory that used motor oil adds carbon.

    • @trollingmodeactivated2500
      @trollingmodeactivated2500 Před 3 lety

      @@BennettTheSmith Thanks mate. Im gonna try it when i can.

    • @obh7762
      @obh7762 Před 3 lety +1

      You should take a piece of the metal, anneal it, then quench in vegetable oil. do this with another piece in water and another air cooled. test with a file for hardness. tracks, to my knowledge, are not made of high carbon steel.

    • @trollingmodeactivated2500
      @trollingmodeactivated2500 Před 3 lety

      @@obh7762 what ive read about tracks is that they are high carbon steel and mangane aswell and i see larger sparks when cuttin track than mild steel aswell. But modern tracks migh be less carbon than older ones

  • @shotgunsam23
    @shotgunsam23 Před 3 lety

    That’s pretty cool. Your poor shower btw.

  • @laizen
    @laizen Před rokem

    Did you refining the bloom?

    • @BennettTheSmith
      @BennettTheSmith  Před rokem +1

      I refined it as much as I could, most ended up breaking into bits too small that I’m saving for a second smelt in a better shaped furnace. I did keep two larger pieces just as mementos of the first attempt.

    • @Mechanicus_Instrumentum
      @Mechanicus_Instrumentum Před měsícem

      @@BennettTheSmith Did it turn into wrought iron or steel I was wondering if it was possible to turn ordinary scrap metal into wrought iron since technically you should start with pig iron in that case? Or did the blooms not consolidate properly and they were too fragile?

    • @BennettTheSmith
      @BennettTheSmith  Před měsícem

      ⁠@@Mechanicus_Instrumentum I suppose it’s possible to end up with wrought iron, but it would likely be more efficient to do that as a secondary process, after refining and homogenizing the bloom.
      I ended up with a piece of steel with many distinct layers, probably a medium to low carbon steel overall.
      It might be possible to turn scrap mild steel into wrought, but it would probably cost more in time and effort than sourcing antique wagon wheels and other existing wrought iron.