Casting Other Metals 
              I know some of you will be wondering about bronze. I haven’t  tried it yet. I am told you can do it with the same sort of furnace, but you’ll  probably want a real clay crucible and smaller charcoal. You need to burn fuel  a lot faster for higher temperatures. There are also some tricky things with  getting the right flux cover on the metal to avoid gas bubbles. Worse, you  can’t cook it very long or you boil off the tin before the copper can fully  melt. Then you have to add more tin and you have no idea what alloy you’re  working with. Maybe someday I’ll be willing to bother. 
              Another possibility is iron. You need a lot of heat, but no worries about alloys. I haven’t found any need  to do this yet, but I know a group of guys who make cast iron art, and I went  to one of their melts. Here’s a brief tour of their operation. 
              They have fancy molds made from soft refractory blocks that are  exotic compared to my sand from the building supply store. (My sand would  probably be melted by molten iron and fuse to the casting.) 
                           
              Some are open-faced molds made with a Dremel directly in the  refractory. 
                           
              One fellow had a vertical mold. 
                           
              And this is a huge, complicated mold. 
                           
              Here you can see a ladles preheating with a gas burner  driven by an old vacuum cleaner fan. They have two ladles the size of my entire  furnace! 
                           
              The buckets all contain coke, iron or flux. A cupola furnace  can go through a lot of materials in  a hurry. 
                           
              Here’s the cupola preheating. Notice the protective gear? If  you think molten aluminum is hot… 
                           
              Here one of the guys is putting in the bod plug – a little  clay chunk that stops up the furnace while it starts melting. 
                           
              After adding the fuel and metal, it was not long before the  gas burners were replaced with blowers. I was amazed how quickly thereafter the  furnace could be tapped. I’m pretty sure it was faster than my little furnace  melts a crucible of aluminum. (On the other hand, one of the artists was  passing out the products of his home distillation experiments, so I don’t trust  my sense of time completely.) 
                           
              While these guys started pouring, two more guys were filling  the next ladle. 
                           
              For that really big mold they needed two, so they tapped one  and kept it hot with a piece of refractory insulation over the top. Then they  started pouring when the second ladle was almost full. These guys have lots of  experience. 
                           
              Here’s the gang posing after the pour. 
                           
              Now the real work starts, chipping hardened refractory out  of the rough castings. 
                           
              Here’s one closer to cleaned off. 
                           
              And of course the big arch that took two ladles of iron. 
                           
              That was a wonderful afternoon, but as cool as all this  looks, I think aluminum will keep boaty types busy for more time time than most  of us want to spend off the water. 
              Dangers 
              As you might imagine, some cautions are in order. As I  mentioned last month, molten aluminum is 10 times hotter than boiling water. It  can mess you up in a hurry. If you spill it on anything wet there will be an  explosion from water instantaneously bursting into superheated steam. This can  make concrete explode and of course throws molten metal everywhere. This is  bad. Do your homework on safety if you’re going to attempt this, and think  through every step carefully. I know I’m harping on this, but it’s important.  
              Or do like Chuck does and send the patterns to a foundry.  
              But the real danger with this isn’t the hot metal. It’s that  you’ll get addicted. I’d hate to count up how many hours I spent to set this up  and learn how to use it. But once you get accustomed to having cast-to-order  parts, it’s pretty hard to go back. So weigh carefully whether you need yet  another excuse to never throw anything away!  
                 
               
              Rob Rohde-Szudy 
                Madison,   Wisconsin, USA 
  robrohdeszudy@yahoo.com   |