@@luckygen1001 Hello how are you doing This bus my first time to watch such a good video. My name is simba temani from Zambia city Lusaka. Can this furnace of your smelt chrome ore
Thanks heaps for the vids. After doing a poor job of trying to cast iron last weekend I was able to do so successfully today. Using your videos as a reference I discovered that I was adding far too much air and it was cooling things off and creating slag. Today there was next to no slag and poured super fluidly
Thanks for great video. I had problems with cracking as the mould cooled on some model loco spoked wheels. I had recycled some cast iron and now thinking it might of had contaminants that had made it too brittle and crack rather than heat stress shrinkage cause the cracks. Had thought about adding steel to give a little bit of ductility but never did. Going to try again after watching you. Did not realise just how much black magic there was in getting the blend just right,so many different combinations of alloys in the iron!
great vid Luckygen, I see your plinth stuck to your cruicible too. (i've only done one bronze melt and mine stuck too) should i be worried that it might fall off mid pour? cheers
Fantastic, wow and that machine finish is awesome. I am really enjoying your video's sir. You are so down to earth and full of practical information obviously the lessions of years of having a crack, experimenting with metals.....needless to say failures along the way but we the viewers are the recipients of your excellence. Just great, sucj a pleasure and what a great learning tool your videos are. Heading off to hospital next week for a knee replacement so part of the rehabilitation will be a healthy dose of catching up on your videos. Cheers
@@luckygen1001 I was also wondering about other trace elements like sulfur or any other strange things that may have been added to the steel. Would it oxidize them to?
Have you tried to create high-carbon steel by melting cast iron and then adding some low carbon steel or iron nails? I would be interested to cast some parts which require higher tensile strength than normal cast iron, but still could be melted in a normal furnace. I guess when the carbon content gets too low, the melting point rises too much for this kind of furnace.
No I have not tried to create high carbon steel by adding low carbon steel to cast iron. A long time ago I did an experiment to see how much steel I could add to cast iron, 5Kgs of iron was melted and then added 5 Kgs of steel and it worked. Cast iron has to be very hot to dissolve steel and you have use small pieces as large pieces take a long time to dissolve.
@@luckygen1001 Interesting. 5kg of steel added that's surprisingly much. The carbon must have gone below 3% or even below 2%. Would be interesting to know how much stronger this is than normal cast iron.
Hey Luckygen, do you have tips to recognize different types of steel by inspection? How can you tell the difference between construction steel and free-cutting steel? They look the same to me.
Next time instead of coke try glas perls like used as blasting media, the glass melts before the steel or cast iron, it floats ontop and creates a protective layer like the slag on arc welding electrodes make on your welds You can either pour it off before casting, skim it with a spoon or cast with it and make the cast iron spout in a way that it collects the slag on the surface thats also the way blacksmiths smeltered the iron they needed in the middle ages, lletting coal powder and crushed iron ore reduce to iron under a protective glass layer, the created CO2 usually just floats through the glass and also can create a shielding effect in addition to the glass itself, you should try that
There are hundreds of steels and they all have a different melting points. Pure iron melts at 1534 C. There are lots of challenges with steel castings and is out of my league.
Some of that coke does burn off but you need add enough to have a layer to protect the steel from burning. Just before I am ready to add ferrosilicon, coke and slag are removed. If I leave the coke it will run into the mold and block the flow of cast iron to the other parts of the mold cavity.
Ah, got it, that makes sense to me now. So the coke protects the iron beneath (from oxidation) by consuming any oxygen that makes its way in there and essentially covering the molten iron surface with a layer of carbon dioxide (not unlike certain welding operations), and then you remove that "coke cap" just before pouring, once its protection role is completed. And, along the way, it may provide some free carbon that's taken up by the iron. It sure does produce a beautiful casting. I don't think I've ever seen a cross-section that was so consistent! I learn at the feet of the master :)
I tried to melt broken brake discs in small pots, but I didn't manage to bring them to a liquid state even though the temperature was very high, it melted my oven, I don't understand why it didn't work, what's wrong?
Great demonstration as always👏, I've often wondered how to add steel into the melt and not lose it's properties. I'm wondering if I'm adding enough Ferro silicon to my melts after seeing this though.
Gday Lucky I would like to ask you 2 question around coke. Do you make your own coke? And if so how do you do it.? I've been reseaching it and 1 thing I'll read says 12-36 for it to melt don't let it burn and the next thing I read or watch is just baking off the impurities and you got coke once it stops smoking. Can you please help me with this one. Thanks Derek
How long does it take new iron, steel, and additives to mix uniformly? It sounds like some of the process involves endothermic or exothermic chemical reactions.
Hey, I've been reading about ferrosilicon. Apparently it's made with silica (quartz or sand) , Coke (or charcoal), and millscale (but sometimes out of scrap steel) I would love to see someone make ferrosilicon with sand, wood charcoal , and scrap steel!
@@luckygen1001 Depends on what someone calls old ; } In China a 25 year old girl is considered over the hill. But one things for sure, none of us are getting any younger.
on the vise nut with the riser, would a radius at the riser/part transition have eliminated the hot spot, and resultant shrinkage hole in the part? your vids are not only incredibly educational, but also equally addictive, lol
luckygen1001 no argument on that point, especially as the shrinkage on the "no riser" part is basically a symetrical blemish that could easily be compensated for in the pattern design, while the risered part shrink hole seems more structurally significant. Facing a blemish off seems no more arduous than cutting a riser off, lol. I'm more curious of the "mechanics" of the hot spot formation than advocating risers, as a part/pattern profile could cause a similar "transition of planes" problem in a complex part. Your expertise is obvious, and a question never asked is an intelligent answer never heard. Thanks for providing one!
Wow how many time to change liquid iron, please answer. next time try it with iron granules from tile and nails and engine bearings. I want to know the results
Could you not add oxygen to the air blast and achieve higher temperatures? Would the furnace and crucible withstand such temperatures, or would you have to use a cupola design?
I discovered the name of the alloy It is chromium cast iron But i don’t know what ratio of cast iron and chromium A foundry near to where i live he is mixing stainless steel 1kg miled steel 5 kg and 10 kg cast iron
This channel is insanely informative. I am so happy I stumbled upon it!!! Thank you for such great work!!
Thank you for watching my videos.
Couldn't have said it any better 👍
@@luckygen1001 Hello how are you doing This bus my first time to watch such a good video. My name is simba temani from Zambia city Lusaka. Can this furnace of your smelt chrome ore
@@simbatemani5404 Most likely not.
For doing this job is better waste oil or diesel for the maximum heat?
If you have plenty of money use diesel or if you are poor like me use waste oil. Both will generate high temperatures to melt cast iron.
luckygen1001 Thank you so much.You are not poor,you are amazing
This was a great video, not only did you cast it, show your ratios, but also the tests, and machining of the final products!
Thanks heaps for the vids. After doing a poor job of trying to cast iron last weekend I was able to do so successfully today. Using your videos as a reference I discovered that I was adding far too much air and it was cooling things off and creating slag. Today there was next to no slag and poured super fluidly
Great to hear that you sorted out your problems melting cast iron. Did you make a video of it?
@@luckygen1001 only the pour and some stills of polystyrene positive and the end product. I can post if you are interested
Video is up
Very impressed by the sound when facing in the lathe - sounds like very good cast iron.
Yes you are right it was a delight to machine!
Please don’t cut the furnace part out. I love to se you melting and adding the metal in it.
👍👍👍👍
Make more video 🔥🔥🔥😁
Exelente trabajo
Con este horno UD puede hacer llaves de herramientas?
Hi, ever tried melting milling chips/shavings or grinding dust ?
Very pleasant to watch. Accurate work and narration. Hope to see many more videos.
How much propane did this use?
OR just whatever fuel you used
10 liters of waste oil.
Thanks for great video. I had problems with cracking as the mould cooled on some model loco spoked wheels. I had recycled some cast iron and now thinking it might of had contaminants that had made it too brittle and crack rather than heat stress shrinkage cause the cracks. Had thought about adding steel to give a little bit of ductility but never did. Going to try again after watching you. Did not realise just how much black magic there was in getting the blend just right,so many different combinations of alloys in the iron!
You are right iron castings should not crack when cooling down maybe a contaminant in there.
great vid Luckygen, I see your plinth stuck to your cruicible too. (i've only done one bronze melt and mine stuck too) should i be worried that it might fall off mid pour? cheers
With bronze it may fall of mid pour.
@@luckygen1001 oh damn that sounds terrifing :(
Fantastic, wow and that machine finish is awesome. I am really enjoying your video's sir. You are so down to earth and full of practical information obviously the lessions of years of having a crack, experimenting with metals.....needless to say failures along the way but we the viewers are the recipients of your excellence. Just great, sucj a pleasure and what a great learning tool your videos are. Heading off to hospital next week for a knee replacement so part of the rehabilitation will be a healthy dose of catching up on your videos. Cheers
Hospitals can be very boring places to be while recovering.
You are a very brave man machining in a lathe with hose clamps holding the half's together. Keep up the great work pouring metal !!!!
Hose clamps are a very effective way to clamp the two halves together to machine them.
Thanks for sharing and explaining so well, and your responses to questions.
Great stuff Lucky. I wish I could import your knowledge into my brain. Keep the vids coming!
You need to have another try at melting cast iron.
You are correct, sir! I'll give it a try with my cheapo setup when I get a chance.
Great video as always.. you have a perfect teachers tone of voice.. sure wish you were paid to do this in much greater, comprehensive, depth.
If you oxygenate the steel, will it purify the steel into back into raw iron? If not, do you know how one could go about doing this?
Blowing oxygen through steel will burn all the carbon and it will be pure iron.
@@luckygen1001 I was also wondering about other trace elements like sulfur or any other strange things that may have been added to the steel. Would it oxidize them to?
Oxygen will oxidize most other elements because of the high temperatures.
Have you tried to create high-carbon steel by melting cast iron and then adding some low carbon steel or iron nails? I would be interested to cast some parts which require higher tensile strength than normal cast iron, but still could be melted in a normal furnace. I guess when the carbon content gets too low, the melting point rises too much for this kind of furnace.
No I have not tried to create high carbon steel by adding low carbon steel to cast iron. A long time ago I did an experiment to see how much steel I could add to cast iron, 5Kgs of iron was melted and then added 5 Kgs of steel and it worked. Cast iron has to be very hot to dissolve steel and you have use small pieces as large pieces take a long time to dissolve.
@@luckygen1001 Interesting. 5kg of steel added that's surprisingly much. The carbon must have gone below 3% or even below 2%. Would be interesting to know how much stronger this is than normal cast iron.
Hey Luckygen, do you have tips to recognize different types of steel by inspection?
How can you tell the difference between construction steel and free-cutting steel? They look the same to me.
Keep em coming, you've got my subscription.
Request, please do melts of fine metals and some good mixes for jewelry making.
Sorry I don't melt gold or silver.
Next time instead of coke try glas perls like used as blasting media, the glass melts before the steel or cast iron, it floats ontop and creates a protective layer like the slag on arc welding electrodes make on your welds
You can either pour it off before casting, skim it with a spoon or cast with it and make the cast iron spout in a way that it collects the slag on the surface
thats also the way blacksmiths smeltered the iron they needed in the middle ages, lletting coal powder and crushed iron ore reduce to iron under a protective glass layer, the created CO2 usually just floats through the glass and also can create a shielding effect in addition to the glass itself, you should try that
This may be a silly question.But what's the loger red airline?We call in the states Chicago line normally air.Is that what that is
Not air has waste oil in it.
Great job! What temperature is required to melt steel? What is the challenge with 100% steel castings?
There are hundreds of steels and they all have a different melting points. Pure iron melts at 1534 C. There are lots of challenges with steel castings and is out of my league.
Beautiful melt! What happens to the coke? Do you just wait for it to burn off or do you just remove the excess with the slag before pouring?
Some of that coke does burn off but you need add enough to have a layer to protect the steel from burning. Just before I am ready to add ferrosilicon, coke and slag are removed. If I leave the coke it will run into the mold and block the flow of cast iron to the other parts of the mold cavity.
Ah, got it, that makes sense to me now. So the coke protects the iron beneath (from oxidation) by consuming any oxygen that makes its way in there and essentially covering the molten iron surface with a layer of carbon dioxide (not unlike certain welding operations), and then you remove that "coke cap" just before pouring, once its protection role is completed. And, along the way, it may provide some free carbon that's taken up by the iron. It sure does produce a beautiful casting. I don't think I've ever seen a cross-section that was so consistent! I learn at the feet of the master :)
I tried to melt broken brake discs in small pots, but I didn't manage to bring them to a liquid state even though the temperature was very high, it melted my oven, I don't understand why it didn't work, what's wrong?
Very impressive video thank you Luckygen
Which material is used for melting cast iron?
Really big respect to you sir..i want to know more about metal features..casting and mixibg metals..keep going..respect
is rebar a good candidate for recycling?
I have never used rebar but you could try it and tell me how it went.
Great demonstration as always👏, I've often wondered how to add steel into the melt and not lose it's properties. I'm wondering if I'm adding enough Ferro silicon to my melts after seeing this though.
Gday Lucky I would like to ask you 2 question around coke. Do you make your own coke? And if so how do you do it.? I've been reseaching it and 1 thing I'll read says 12-36 for it to melt don't let it burn and the next thing I read or watch is just baking off the impurities and you got coke once it stops smoking. Can you please help me with this one. Thanks Derek
I don't make my coke it is a lot easier to buy it.
@@luckygen1001 Gday thanks for your reply mate I'm starting to think thats the best option for now. Thanks again for your help I appreciate it. Derek.
Absolutely brilliant.
How long does it take new iron, steel, and additives to mix uniformly? It sounds like some of the process involves endothermic or exothermic chemical reactions.
Adding ferrosilicon causes a exothermic reaction. Iron and steel don't take long to mix uniformly.
Hey, I've been reading about ferrosilicon. Apparently it's made with silica (quartz or sand) , Coke (or charcoal), and millscale (but sometimes out of scrap steel) I would love to see someone make ferrosilicon with sand, wood charcoal , and scrap steel!
Cool video, I'm looking for steel casing. Can you do a video on making a cast using soup cans as the melt? Thanks and keep up the good work!!
what crucibles do you use?
Clay graphite.
I could watch you ole boys all day long, your the last of your kind. They just don't make them the way they used to ; }
Yeah you are right I am old
@@luckygen1001 Depends on what someone calls old ; } In China a 25 year old girl is considered over the hill. But one things for sure, none of us are getting any younger.
how long did this take
Is that cooking oil you use or motor oil?
Motor oil.
Why not use flux for melting screws?
Alhamdulillah good info :)
Cruciable risers made from?mine is too low also
Where did you get the metal flask?
What kind of furnace is this?
Waste oil burning furnace.
on the vise nut with the riser, would a radius at the riser/part transition have eliminated the hot spot, and resultant shrinkage hole in the part? your vids are not only incredibly educational, but also equally addictive, lol
Yes that is true but casting one without a riser shows that a riser is not needed.
luckygen1001 no argument on that point, especially as the shrinkage on the "no riser" part is basically a symetrical blemish that could easily be compensated for in the pattern design, while the risered part shrink hole seems more structurally significant. Facing a blemish off seems no more arduous than cutting a riser off, lol. I'm more curious of the "mechanics" of the hot spot formation than advocating risers, as a part/pattern profile could cause a similar "transition of planes" problem in a complex part. Your expertise is obvious, and a question never asked is an intelligent answer never heard. Thanks for providing one!
I'm sure the neighbors would really wonder wtf I was doing if I lit that bad boy up!
Just think of the possibilities of recycling if you had one.
@@luckygen1001 I do!
Can you melt stainless?
No.
Such a good yt channel
Backyard iron casting. I dip my hat to you sir. Impressive.
Can u please make video how to make ductile cast iron how you add magnesium and what ratio
I have never made ductile.
thanks for sharing.
ONE word. Magic!
Good job!!
What kind if furnace is that i thught you can only melt steel with arc furnace.
Waste oil burning furnace.
easy worker this is our buddy !
How are want diesel oil for the melt one kg iron
very nice work
very nice sir
thanks for sharing
Good jovem , I AM from Brazil
Thanks fo sharing
Wow how many time to change liquid iron, please answer. next time try it with iron granules from tile and nails and engine bearings. I want to know the results
excellent and very practical.
do you know tony little from chillagoe ? founder by trade
Wow, good job
nice show
Brilliant!
thank you but how we can increase the hardness of steel when we melt it ?
Cooling steel rapidly will increase hardness or you can add hardeners like chromium.
You say casting steel is "out of your league". Could you elaborate some? BTW. . . Great video.
My furnace will not reach steel pouring temperatures.
Could you not add oxygen to the air blast and achieve higher temperatures? Would the furnace and crucible withstand such temperatures, or would you have to use a cupola design?
Furnace and crucible would not stand up to those temperatures.
A cupola is the perfect carburisering furnace for steel.
very good sir!
10% thats why is it usually forge-welded together becaqse it oesn't mix well.
I have a client he wants excavator teeth and i don’t know what type of cast iron is it
Plaese need your help
Excavator teeth are steel not cast iron.
luckygen1001 no
It is cast not forged but i don’t know what metal is it
I discovered the name of the alloy
It is chromium cast iron
But i don’t know what ratio of cast iron and chromium
A foundry near to where i live he is mixing stainless steel 1kg miled steel 5 kg and 10 kg cast iron
Hi livkygen1001, Another excellent video chock a block full of casting information. Mark
Hello mark, have you built a furnace yet?
ever make a damascus can with screws makes a nice pattern
You have to be feeling urgent to discard those tongs like that!
I was hoping no one would notice that, they landed in a really bad position.
About how much LPG do you go through every melt?
Very little as I use it to get the furnace hot so it will run on waste oil.
using wood in a refractory for preheat.
hey rascal old man
complete video instantly
Gre@t!
🇮🇷👍👍👍
Все очень нравится..- хреново что не по rus...
adasgh
How to recycle steel
: SELL IT. Any other thing you may think of will just cost you money, pain and time.
Every foundry in the world uses this method.
luckygen1001 the method is very good, the problem is that nobody should ever do it on the scale you are doing it.
internet police
do need to let cast age 12 months before trying to machine
No one lets casting age any more.