In an effort to stop jacking Rufledts thread, I'm keeping my promise of starting my own casting thread once I had something worth writing about. For my own record keeping purposes, I'm going to start at the beginning, so you may have seen some of these pictures and words before, oh well.
First I made a crappy plaster and sand furnace. Widely regarded by people with any actual clue about melting metals as absolute E36 M3, it's been working alright for me now that I'm able to use it.
I had an interesting problem, I couldn't fit charcoal in around the crucible, at least, not enough to get hot and melt stuff. So I did some dabbling with beer cans and my charcoal chimney This worked well, relatively, and was a good education in air supply and cleaning dross. Seriously, cans are E36 M3. But they made some cute little ingots of pure aluminum that will be good for alloying or adding to a melt.
At this point, I decided charcoal in the chimney was a big waste of time and charcoal. And set my sites on propane. Lots of research. LOTS of research. Brought me to the design I have now, made from a Harbor Freight weed burner, black iron pipe, and the orifice from a Mr. Heater tank top propane heater.
https://www.youtube.com/embed/HzKohEzE-_w It's not supposed to do that.
After much experimentation, I have fixed the burner. It's a 10" length of 1" black iron pipe, with 4 3/8" holes drilled in a corkscrew pattern from the base. The weed burner wand I modified by removing the stock flare, drilling out the end of the wand, tapping in 1/4-28 and installing an orifice. The outside of the wand has 1/8" NPT threads, so I drilled out a 1 inch pipe cap and tapped the inside, then drilled 6 3/16" holes around the cap for air.
It works VERY well now, I don't have any videos online of it in action.
This brings us up to yesterday. I melted down a bunch of cast aluminum into ingots and was trying to decide on something to make that would be actually useful, and settled on a rammer for the flasks and greensand I'll be using down the road. I mocked it up in foam, realized it was way too big, and cut 3 inches out of the middle. From there, I covered in masking tape, and buried it in the sand. The steel can acts as a pressure head, in that it lets the metal hold a higher pressure going into the sand for better fill. is the end result. This end was supposed to be a big flat spot, but I ran out of metal on the pour, so It will be cut off. Thanks to some creative drill press foam milling, the center shaft is hand shaped, so I don't really need that top. Instead, I made another tool.
It's not perfectly flat on either side, but the bottom of it is thick enough I can cut a flat level bottom and smooth it out.
These tools will be used to pack greensand into the flasks for sand casting pours. Making better, more intricate, easily replicatable parts. Most people have both ends on the same tool, but I'm not most people. The excess bits that get cut off will be good starts for my next cast pouring..