Home
Metal Supplies
Leather Shop
Lapidary Shop
Wood Shop
Energy








The Free Plans for the Charcoal Powered Metal Casting Furnace are at the bottom of this page.


2 Electric Furnaces For Metal Casting and Crystal Growing
$19.99
This plan set includes easy to follow instructions for building an arc furnace that reaches 2300F, and an electric kiln type furnace which was used for creating artificial ruby, emeralds, and sapphires! This information will save anyone needing these tools literally thousands of dollars in equipment costs, and never worry about breakdown again. These instructions are all inclusive, with good diagrams and easy to follow instructions. Most materials salvageable and/or inexpensive to acquire. These furnaces do NOT include the charcoal metal casting furnace illustrated as a free plan set here at the bottom of this page.

Super Heavy Duty Grinder Made from Old Auto Parts
$8.99
Super shop Grinder for use in the metal or Lapidary shop, or any shop requiring a grinder to sharpen tools or work materials. Very easy to make you will be amazed at its simplicity and power.



How to Make Good Hunting Knives From Files.
$5.00
Treatment of the metal from its beginning as a worn out file, into a fine weapon and tool. Distilled information, no nonsense, all inclusive.



Sustainment Metallica
Ancient Metals Conservation
$9.95
Over 30 In depth No-nonsense pages on professionally conserving ancient metals, in particular ancient bronze coins, but covers electro-stripping and mechanical cleaning of metals by hand as well. This information is some of the best available and is used by many dealers and even some conservation departments of museums and universitys. This report is drawn from over a dozen different sources and over 20 years experience in bronze and metal conservation. Many have read this report and stated it is the best information they have ever purchased concerning such endeavors. Learn how to turn your uncleaned coins into gems worth much more than you paid for them. This method is time tested and proven to be superior; success in conserving and preserving ancient coinage (Important world history) can be yours too. The future will thank you. A super comprehensive report, it details every step of the conservation process, and can be accomplished safely and easily by anyone with decent mechanical and electronic aptitude. Postage is one dollar. Do Not miss this chance to gain some hard earned information portrayed in easily understood terms. There is no need to buy cleaning apparatus when you can make your own easily by salvaging the parts. The unit(s) you can make will be far superior to anything on the market today, and will cost you nothing but the information here, and your time. Copyright Bill Gallagher 1999. Only proper information concerning the entire conservation process will allow you to realize the true potential of uncleaned coinage so do not delay! Good Luc and check my other auctions for more items of interest and other listings of the conservation coin cleaning report.




Hand Held Carver/Grinder
$12.95
This unit is like a larger sized foredom or dreml tool, and is great for use as a wood sculpting unit, and also works easily with metal or stone. It is a high speed unit built around a small motor like the type easily salvaged from older electric typewriters. These are readily available and cheap at any thrift store. many times they are given away free. The unit is designed with a pistol grip handle and can be made to accomodate many if not all types of bits. Excellent Design.








How To Draw Wire and Small Tubing. Make Custom Wire Sizes and Shapes In The Home Shop.

Click Here For A Free Planset Photo Presentation On Building A KILLER Sandblasting Unit!


An Easy Oven For Baking Enamel Onto Metal Parts.


How To Achieve Forge Black Iron Rustproofing and Metal Finish.

Build a Real Cool Paint Sprayer From Junk.


How To Cut Fine Designs From Sheet Metals With Acid.


Click Here For Some Good Gun Smith Instructions: M-14 CARBINE --- DO IT YOURSELF!


email me: luxefaire @ gmail.com


Build A Charcoal Fueled Metal Casting Furnace



This project is easily accomplished by anyone with at least an average mechanical aptitude. The actions of the author are protrayal of tested knowledge. The actions of anyone else, whether aware of this knowledge in whole or in part, or not, are in No Way to be construed as actions of the author.


It is very simple to build a metal smelting furnace powered with regular store-bought charcoal briquets. Temperatures in excess of 2500 degrees fahrenheit can consistently be reached, and sometimes a good bit higher. The apparatus can be as simple as a coffee can buried partially in the ground, with a pipe and blow dryer for the air source, or as extravagant as a galvanized trash can utilizing firebrick, fireproof mortar (refractory mix), stainless steel, and a heavy duty air blower, as can be found on many high output electric and gas heaters or air conditioners.

Care must be taken to measure and understand the air input to your furnace though, because many times too little is ok, and will work, whereas too much air, too much pressure, will blow cinders out of the fire and even dampen the heat. I use a blow dryer on low, and can melt silver easily, with high settings used only at the end of a brass melt. Below are a few pictures of the furnace I am currently using. It is nice and portable, and I have melted 5 pounds of silver in one crucible load with this furnace.




The main thing one needs to be concerned about when melting metal (Or doing ANY shop work, for that matter) is SAFETY. Say it: Say---ffffff---TEE. Molten metal will go off like a bomb if mishandled, or if impurities are introduced into the crucible during a melt, and the shrapnel of course is molten and will burn through most things, you included, before you even know it is happening. Not cool at all. This I know from experience. Molten metal blowing up is one of the ugliest things I have ever witnessed.


Notice in these pictures of my furnace that there are two compartments, a lower, and an upper. The lower is nothing more than a large coffee can with top and bottom cut out. A piece of screen separates the top and bottom compartments, resting on the lower cans opening. The lower can has a hole in the side also, just big enough to allow the air pipe in, and it sits on some filler, clay. The top compartment is another coffee can, bottom down, with the bottom left intact, but punched full of larger sized (three quarter inch) holes, to allow the airflow good access to the fuel charge, the charcoal. Make a lot of holes, dont skimp. You want plenty of airflow through the two compartments.


Firebrick and common clay from the ground is what I use to contain the heat, and hold the cans in place. I usually clean and refill around the cans each time I use the furnace. The pipe for the airflow goes into the bottom compartment, through the wall of the little galvanized trash can, and through the fire brick and coffee can. It enters the lower compartment at about the halfway point, and closer to the bottom is better. The lower compartment allows a bit of pressure to be built up, to jet up through the top compartment, where the fuel and crucible live. The charcoal goes in the top can, and you need to light the charcoal first, using a propane torch, or lighter fluid. If you use lighter fluid use just a small amount and let it soak in for a full 120 seconds before lighting. Once lit, and once some of the briquets get ashed over a little, like at the corners, turn on your air supply and away she goes.


After turning on the air supply, put the loaded crucible on the coals once they are totally ashed over, and continue to feed the fire with charcoal until your metal puddles. You have to feed the fire by placing briquets around the edges of the crucible with tongs. Let the crucible fall a little into the upper compartment, after the fire gets going good, so that hot coals surround it. The crucible will get red hot quickly. I use either a fused silica crucible or a graphite. You can gently shake, or tap the crucible occasionally, agitating the metal, which may induce melting. I use kingsford charcoal and it is by far the best for this purpose. I also use powdered charcoal as a flux, and there are many other things that work as flux too, like borax and the like. Powdered charcoal is free, and can be collected from the bottom of the bag you buy. It covers the metal and keeps it from oxidizing as it heats. You can be liberal with it, like a few tablespoons per load of metal, if you are using a five pound crucible.


If the metal is having trouble melting, sometimes addition of a little flux will remedy the problem. The Complete Metal Smith by Tim McCreight is a great book to have around whenever working with metal.


A swirling motion on the surface of the molten metal usually means it is ready to pour. Never look directly over a crucible. Wear gloves, a hat, safety glasses, leather shoes and a long sleeved shirt when smelting metals. I use crucible tongs which are just a long set of plier-like things I got at a flea market. I grab the lip of the crucible firmly, then quickly and smoothly move the crucible to my mold and pour in one fluid motion.


I use my metal casting furnace in conjunction with the delft casting method, a unique and extremely easy to use molding system that will produce highly detailed and consistent parts with little or no fuss. Search for Swest Jewelers supply, Indian Jewelers Supply, or Rio Grande Jewelers Supply online, they all carry the kit. It is around 100 bux, and comes complete with a video, casting sand, and a small mold. Once you see the system you can make bigger molds easily, and it is well worth your time to get into this if you have a need to reproduce small to medium sized parts from original models of high detail and uniformity.


As in any sandcasting, undercut models are not feasible, but many many other things can be reproduced easily and efficiently with sand casting. There are cheaper sands, and different mold set ups (Pictured at top of this presentation) and if you are after a lesser uniformity, or the pieces do not require great detail, then other types of sandcasting should be looked into by you too.

Good luck and thanks for visiting autodidactics.com. Stay tuned.




email me: luxefaire @ gmail.com



This site hosted by COMPWEBTECH.COM
For the best deal in internet hosting and much more write to Larry at larry @ compwebtech.com....tell him you saw the info here.


Visit
www.luxefaire.com
for more information with attitude and to see some of our finished products using information as is portrayed in this site

Email Orders to

email me:

luxefaire@gmail.com

FAST SHIPPING