Making Solid Copper Mugs, but should you drink from them?
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- Опубліковано 27 тра 2024
- In this video, I make a solid copper mugs in my home foundry. I designed the mugs in fusion 360 and the 3d printed the patterns in a plastic called PLA. Then I made a mold using a material called Suspendaslurry. After casting, I carved Walnut handles to fit onto the mugs.
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I'd suggest using brass screws to secure the handles instead of steel. Those steel screws will react with the copper and cause a layer of corrosion to form over time which could make it impossible to get the screws out later should you need to replace the handle.
Not to mention copper, brass, or bronze screws would be more pleasing to the eye.
Electrolysis between stainless and copper is fine for a mug. Copper reacts with aluminium and zinc.
That and steel screws with such a nice mug just makes it look cheapish. Idk, I’d still love to have those mugs tho
Say no to nonsimilar metals, not even once
Great looking mugs, if you wanted a totally smooth surface could you sand the marks out or would you just chase them around? I like the “antiqued” look though
These look great. If you plan to try and make them again, before you start applying slurry, finish your blanks with wax and make the finish as you would like to see the final product. You can eliminate the printing striations and seams with the wax filling in the ridges. The slurry will take on the smoothness of the polished waxed mold and when you melt the PLA the walls of the mold will be smooth. Your finished product will be dolphin smooth.
This is exactly what I thought when we was smoothing out the edges of the glued on part!
great idea, i hope he sees this
I second this!
Damn solved a problem for thank you
Also, exporting the initial CAD model with a higher precision in the STL file or even using a slicer that accepts STEP files will help greatly with the grainy circles. It is a cool look on the finished product for this project, but if you want nice smooth circles it is perfectly possible to achieve with a normal 3D printer.
Traditionally copper saucepans were plated with tin which of course is food safe. I would suggest tin plating the interiors either electrolytically or possibly by filling them with molten tin and pouring it out to leave the inside plated.
Flux, heat, melt tin, wipe. Please tell people to do this more. Copper poisoning sucks.
Excellent advice.
I think the copper looks great as it is...wouldn't worry about copper poisoning since most houses still have copper waterlines.
@@KellyPKrameryes but they're in contact with water, not acidic food or drinks, which can cause a lot more leeching to occur. There's a reason people tin copper.
You dont really want a more conductive material for a mug. This will just make the energy flow better and make hot things cool faster and cool things heat up faster.
Was about to say this lol. Copper would be terrible for any drink you want to keep at a certain temperature. It will reach equilibrium with the environment too quickly.
Yeah, you should keep these in the freezer, instant cold drink. Super cool for that (get it?) Otherwise, the opposite of what you want
Yeah, very, very attractive mugs. But horrible for all the reasons you give. If you pour cold drink in a mug, you want the mug to NOT get cold. That’s called insulation.
But, very cool looking mugs. It would be neat if you make the mug the exact size of a disposable plastic cup. That way you can slip a plastic cup in the mug to insulate your drink.
until it reaches a thermal equalibrium
Copper is unmatched (other than silver) for certain cooking purposes, but pretty bad for other purposes.
Copper-tin or copper-silver can look a lot like pure copper and resist acids.
They are types of Bronze; they form a patina (metal carbonates, mostly) that protects the base metal from acid leaching.
Recycled Bronze can be risky; arsenic, antimony and beryllium Bronze are becoming rarer, but are still found in the electronics industry and old Sculptures.
Beryllium was widely used in contact-pins for connectors; flexible, corrosion and abrasion resistant.
A tiny sliver of beryllium Bronze under the skin can lead to ulcerating sores that take weeks to heal!
That's the most interesting comment I've heard all year. I know that in my trade of steam fitting we install bronze valves a lot.
If you’re not planning on using some sort of coating, I would be very careful drinking anything other than water. Particularly stuff with acids like lemon/lime juice that you demonstrated can be very bad as it will leech the copper off and straight into your drink.
Heavy metal poisoning is not very difficult to get if you’re unaware so be careful.
Also, it warms up cold drinks much faster than a normal cup would. Overall not very useful.
I was thinking about this too, A great follow-up video would be plating the inside with a protective coating - I think they use aluminum?
@@douglasboyle6544 they typically line a copper mug with a Stainless steel liner. Kind of like the inside of a tumbler.
@@matrix626 ah. That's harder to plate.
Don't worry about it. The copper used in the scrap pipe and wire is pure copper. Where you might need to be careful of the source of the copper is placer metal you find in the ground, or copper you refine from an ore yourself, where arsenic is definitely going to be present. But the video shows copper tubing and copper wire. Ever drop of water coming into your house that goes into your cooking and drinking comes through copper pipe, and there are purity requirement on it for exactly that reason.
I worked for an artist who used this method for casting aluminum. He would put the hot shells into a pit filled with vermiculite. It would keep complex shapes upright, help retain the heat and hold the shell together if it cracked during casting.
Great work.
One note, copperware has to be coated with tin when will it be in contact with any acidic substance either food or drink, to prevent leeching while still preserving the thermal conductivity of the material.
You would die from alcohol poisoning before copper toxins😅
@@TG-zd9de After a good night sleep and a bad following day your alcohol will be gone, copper will stick a bit lonnnnger and is a bit harder to diagnose.
You can try both 'till death, in the name of science of course.
My grandfather was a coppersmith.
Copper and foods do not mix - tin the inside with lead free tin, i.e. soft solder, and it'll be fine.
Coppersmiths used dilute hydrochloric acid as "soldering water" to prepare the surface for this.
A more modern solution would be to use lead free soft soldering paste, i.e. ground up solder (e.g. 97% Sn, 3%Cu) in flux paste, brush coat the inside of the mugs with it and the heat them gently untill the paste melts and you get a silvery tinned surface.
Rinse well before use to get rid of any flux residue.
and yet every drop of water that you drink comes into your mouth via a copper pipe. Ask gramps about that.
You should use natural PLA for investment casting. The colorant in your black pla is a good part of the ash you observed.
What awesome mugs! Though you may want to plate the lip and insides with Silver to avoid copper leaking into any citric acid drink like most sodas are. Other than that I cant wait to see what you make next. Also glad the Cardboard tricks working for you.
are hot coffee in the "danger zone" for copper leaking out?
You sure that's an issue? They sell copper mugs for moscow mule drinks and i have never seen any of them plated with anything.
@@amarzzatabecause they expect you to drink the Moscow mule fast ofc
@@dankboi42069 🤣🤣👍
@@amarzzata they have coatings inside
These mugs are neat, for sure I think my favorite part of them, is the primitive handles. It adds so much character to the copper I love it!
The Vornoi pattern that emerged by accident is really something nice to look at. I like how you made the wooden handles also faceted and now they kinda match the smaller pattern on the mugs.
The mugs look fantastic. What I would suggest though is keying the shaft for the handles or using two screws to hold the handles on. I think over time they will loosen on one screw then spin and dump your drink in your lap!
I think just gluing it would be fine
PLA wasn't completely cooked out of the mold. You need as little PLA in this as possible. Basically, you'd need to print the inside and outside of the mug as vase mode shells that you'd then glue together using as little glue as possible (probably modeler's thin glue). The pouring spout and the handle knob, also glued on separately (tho you'd need to print only the outer shell of the handle knob and the spout.
Did you watch the video before giving advice?
There is no pouring spout!
Very neat! Though, you might want to consider plating the lip and inside of the mug with silver to keep the copper from leaching into any drinks with citric acids (most sodas) or anything above a fruit-juice. Apparently it only takes 27 minutes for a Moscow Mule to leach more copper than FDA regulations allow in safe drinking water.
Silver plating the inside would also save you from having to clean off the inevitable oxidization/patina! At least on the inside =D
I thought similarly also, that the insides should be tinned in some fashion to prevent contamination, especially if used with wine, which also has a high acidic component
BS - it same as a copper pot, NOT TOXIC!!!
I love the way the mugs turned out. I especially like the rustic, hand carved walnut handles. Great job!
Its been a year or so since I last saw your videos, and you've really refined your techniques! Love to see a channel growing like this, keep up the great work
I found a really thick copper "bowl" inside an old Eastman Kodak facility being demolished around 1997. It measures 15" across and is relatively shallow with a rise of 3". Weve used it for a firebowl ever since and has some great coloration after hundreds of fires.
I always find your videos fascinating , especially these copper mugs. I really like the handle it looks very natural to hold.
Nice work! I love the “rustic” look. It adds character. Not “perfect” like the ones you buy from China. If you ever make a set of these and sell them I would be interested.
My southern grandmother might throw hands for that act of sacrilege you brought upon that cast iron skillet.😭
As a decoration, they look great. As mugs, I think they won't do it. I mean, they will make a cold drink warm fast and a hot drink warm fast. Awesome to drink natural water at room temperature though =)
Seeing the "imperfections" on the outside at the end, especially on the left mug, made me think they look like a maze. Imagine this random pattern all over the surface instead of a perfectly smooth surface. It kinda fits to the rough handle 👍😎
Hey, it was really cool to see this project go from start to finish. It was a bummer that there was some cracking and air pocket holes left in the end product. I've worked with diecast molds and I would recommend adding a few "vent holes" in the sides of the design of the 3D print next time, so most (if not all) the imperfections can be pushed out to the sides of the end product.
Those handles are perfect. Very cool mugs. Lol I learned the hard way coffee and solid metal mugs usually hurts.
I really like how those cracks look. Can't wait to get my furnace so I can make stuff like this.
If you do make cookware, do tin the inside. It's not difficult
I agree with everyone saying to use brass screws and maybe make some walnut dowels to hide them. You don’t need to glue them in, just make them a pressure fit and if you need to disassemble, you can put a dab of hot glue on them and pull them out. I’ve done this before and it works pretty well. I just heat the tip of the glue stick itself, stick it to the plug, and then when it cools you just pull the glue stick to pop the plug out.
Anyway, they look awesome and I’d absolutely never use one because I hate metallic taste on stuff.. lol I’d buy them to just use as pencil cups or something…
It looks like some of the surface finish issue on the mugs themselves could be caused less by shrinkage, but dissolved gasses in the copper melt affecting viscosity and forming bubbles. liquid copper readily accepts dissolved hydrogen but it doesnt in the solid form which can cause pitting, cracks, and porosity as it solidifies. I recommend degassing the Copper by adding in a small amount (
fresh copper surfaces can't be leached by non-oxidizing acids since copper metal can't reduce protons to hydrogen
Your videos are so interesting to watch. I’d love to see a tour of the shop in a future video!
The creation of these mugs was, as usual, an interesting look into the mind of the creative genius behind Robinson Foundry. I'm always amazed at what you come up with as, step by step, a concept evolves into a concrete product. And regarding the information you impart, well, my cup runneth over...
I like how you left the imperfections from the cooling, and the lines from the 3d printer. it's a satisfying contrast.
That is so cool!!! Metal and wood shop in one!! The flaws in the metal and the rough finish on the handles match perfectly. I hear that copper is actually an antimicrobial so they are often used in water pipes.
Thank you for speaking like a normal person, and not a spastic UA-camr that feels pathologically compelled to turn everything they say into the most exciting catch-phrase ever.
Nice muggs! However, there is a reason you tin the inside that is with contact with the cupper. If you use them daily it will release cupper ions into the liquid and you will be sick.
Great job! Looks like when you sliced the stl, you have low polygon sides. You can see them in the cast. You can increase the deviations and number of sides to make it close to a perfect circle
Moscow muels are actually fairly controversial. The thing that help give them their destinctive taste is the copper basically being leached into the drink by the acidity of it, which needless to say, probably isn't great for you!
Unless it takes you a month to finish a Moscow Mule, you are not going to ingest any measurable copper.
@@oldnubbins8060 Or less than an hour. 😒
Gotta love a functional cast! And what great character!
This is a random thought but, would a large one of those ultra-sonic bath things work for removing the shell after?
A random good thought .👍👌
Beautiful work! I imagine dwarves drink their mead out of mugs like these.
You're an artist! Everything I've seen you make turns out super cool!
Love this , your patience working through the processes of making these mugs is admirable.. not a quality I possess 🙄😂😂🙏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
I have a few suggestions to make:
Beakers are usually made of an insulating material not one that conducts heat like copper does. That's why glass or ceramic is often used, because these are not good conductors. For example my titanium camping beaker, already a better insulator than copper, has double walls and a vacuum in between to hold the temperature of my drink longer.
I'm not sure that copper is a healthy material to drink from or keep food in. My great grand father, who was a copper smith, used to coat the insides of his vessels with tin. In fact most copper vessels I've seen have been treated in this way.
I'd have used wax instead of plastic to make the positive forms for the beakers. Most plastics leave some ash behind when they are heated up to their melting point. Wax just turns to liquid and then evaporates leaving a pristine negative form.
Personally, I find the rims on these beakers not ideal and not really inviting to place my lips on. They will also possibly make drinking difficult without dribbling. There's a good reason why the rims of most drinking vessels are round and smooth.
Otherwise, all in all, an interesting project.
I love the green "flame" of copper in the forge! Cool video!
Anther benifit of copper for mugs is that it can absorb the flavor of a drink. While not much, if you use a copper mug for the same drink for years, it starts adding to it, as the flavor mingles with other ones. That does mean if you use one for Moscow mules (a common drink to use copper mugs with), then put wine in, your wine will taste bad, and the mules will have a strange flavor. So, unless you are careful (say using one type of drink in low quantities that compliments the main one), use it for the same drink.
If you plan to drink Moscow mules from these, I suggest a protective coating on the inside of the mug. The acid from citrus leeches the metal into the contents of the food/drink.
Very cool, I'll never do this but this will never be recreated in a lab so it's your slice of eternity. It's awesome for people to see how timely and difficult this is and know their item is a one of a kind ... Imagine buying one and finding out someone else has it too! Buy the pair! :)
Looks amazing!! The time and craftsmanship you put in reflect the finished product.That being said, next time if you ever make a mug, refine the connection point from the handle. A slimmer attachment would feel more natural holding the mug.
And tin the inside....
Brilliant looking mugs, defects and all I would consider rounded edges on the top edge would make it more comfortable to drink from perhaps.
quick tip, use LOST PLA which is a form of pla that is much like lost wax, it melts super easy and leaves no residue
The texture on the handle is a really nice touch. Feels like old times :)
Copper cups are fine for anything non-acidic. I wouldn't use them for tomato soup or even soft drinks. Hot tea may also be a bad idea. Copper isn't typically toxic, depending on the alloy (we will come back to that) but, chronic exposure may cause problems. That said copper was one of the first materials used for kitchenware in general and is still in use for specific applications in cooking, primarily candy making.
Now about the alloy. Copper is a very soft metal. So it is typically alloyed with other materials to increase its hardness. Some of these are heavy metals like antimony. Those can be toxic in relatively small doses and do not pass out of the body very well. So, they bioaccumulate and cause all kinds of health issues. Since you are making these from scrap, I don't know what the heavy metal content is. As long as you don't degrade the metal, it shouldn't be a big issue (back to that no acid thing) but, something to be aware of.
I used copper plated solid silver cups every day. Copper and Silver cups actually provide health benefits over time as the metal adds a barely noticeable metallic taste, and not only that but the water gets slightly more purified and it adds more minerals that are beneficial to your health. Any type of solid silver dishware and silverware provides these same benefits. I use solid silver cups and plates and spoons, etc. The only downside is dishware and silverware will cost you a small fortune, around $30,000 in today's prices for solid silver dishware and silverware, because of the materials and labor. I have ancestral silver plates and dishes from generations of my family. The oldest silver everyday object that I had, a silver pot was from the 1890s. I come from a zamindari family. This was what we used everyday.
I put a silver .9999 pure 1 oz coin in my drinking water thermos.
My theory is it purifies the water and possibly get health benefits from the silver water.
Maybe it does nothing but it can't hurt.
So I don't know for sure if this is what cause the craggy imperfections and dimples in it, but a possible reason it could be is oxygen trying to escape. When we were casting copper in school, my teacher said copper is notorious for absorbing large amounts of oxygen while melting and it can cause imperfections even with the most ideal investment. Any time I have seen anyone do any serious copper casting, they cover the copper in a few layers of charcoal to minimize oxygen absorption since it will float on the metal's surface. I did that for my one big copper casting and it came out pretty clean.
Clean process and cool design. If you're modelling with Fusion, check your .stl output settings, you can get rid of those facets in the mesh by increasing resolution. The build line texture doesn't transfer but the facets kind of did so just FYI you can control that if you're making the original model with parametric CAD software. A pair of screws, a small non-concentric set screw that gets covered by the concentric panhead screw, would keep the handle from clocking or indexing out over time.
You're an Artist.
Beautiful work,
Copper is safe when pH is above 7 or equal to it.If you acidify your liquid,traces of Cu will be present in the beverage,the longer the time ,the bigger Cu concentration.Higher temperature will enhance the transfer of copper. One doesn't die from drinking a weak Cu solution,but your body might show you on both intake and exhaust orifices that you made a mistake.. This is the main reason why copper hardware was tinned on the inside. The process is very simple,drop a piece of tin(plumbing grade) into the mug,previously heated past the melting point of tin,add a bit of ammonium chloride( it will smoke) and wipe the inside of the mug with a piece of cloth or paper towel
Brilliant Project- Thanks for sharing
Just gorgeous. Nice work.
These would be fun to do some engraving on. Thanks for the idea!
Awesome casting video. Thanks.
Nice work. The mugs looks fantastic. 👍👍
Being an utter novice in casting, but trying, this was an excellent video as well as idea. Thx for sharing bro.
I wish I could make my own. I live in an apt so no tools for me. You did a beautiful job!
Very cool looking and those cracks give nice touch. Just found your channel and video is very well made
Love the finish on the copper cups.
RF, shut up and take my money! Those mugs are superb, and I need them for fully enjoying my bourbon! Great channel; I love your presentation, and ingenuity. Keep up the excellent work. ;)
I love my aluminum cup. It cooks stuff pretty well. I can cook 3 ramen in it if i did it right and I've always wanted my own copper cups.
The most satisfying process to watch .
Cool project!! It's fun when you get copper or brass hot enough to start seeing the crystalline structure.
Answering the question from the video... I'd say treat it like you're drinking out of one of those old lead tankards they used back in the day. Especially if you have a hot acidic liquid in there.
I used to fix musical instruments. Some folks have allergic reactions with the metals in the instrument and we'd electroplate it with silver or gold. You'll end up with silver with a copper undertone similar to plating phosphor bronze . Very pretty to look at and safer to drink out of.
Best to use a brush electro plating instead of dunking it into a solution since the hard edges will collect more silver and appear inconsistent to the rest of the mug.
Nice work! I enjoy the process. One off is art in my book and this is art!
ooh would be perfect for the wayyyyy tooooo hot coffee in office. Just pour it in a copper mug and then put the copper mug in a cold bath of water and the heat will dissipate away without making coffee watery and thin (which it becomes when I fill the mug with ice cubes)
I had a mule for the first time today... in a copper cup. Interesting to learn that this is traditional!
You should try using a spokeshave on the handles instead of a knife, much safer and much better control.
good stuff. Why does it take so long in the slurry curing process? can you heat it to speed up? curious.
Great job. They looks pretty nice 👍
I think all the pits and imperfections make them look awesome.
Beautiful piece of artistry. Question........can you tell me where I might find the model you used for your variation on the theme?
After dipping the part in the slurry 2 or 3 times, can sand be added to the slurry to make it thicker and stronger?
Im making a more complex part and cant really sprinkle sand in some areas of the part after dipping
The Roman's used to drink water that came from lead line aqueducts. I think drinking from copper should be good.
I think it would be bad for metal Poisoning as copper can like some randome dude said "you might want to consider plating the lip and inside of the mug with silver to keep the copper from leaching into any drinks with citric acids"
GREAT VIDEO!! Love the mugs!!
Great looking mugs!
noble metals usually not casted, copper things for cooking/eating traditionally made from sheet of metal and hammer.
Look how you put your initials on cup's bottom by hammer - your name could be 3D printed on mold and casted, and it is the only way if it was iron but copper rarely casted
To je prava mojstrovina. Čestitke.
Awesome!! Cheers Robinson
If you flatten the sprue and remove the handle, It would look like a nice chalice or stemmed cup. You might want to line that cup with tin or stainless steel. Your body needs copper to metabolize iron, and for strong bones, but too much is a bad thing. Anyways, it's a great build, and I enjoyed it. Thanks.
Tin cans are plated with... tin! Nowadays it is often also plated with plastics. And copper pans are also plated and only the core is copper. srsly heavy metal poisoning is no fun, kids
Is there any taste copper imparts? The copper pan I had was excellent at conduction and it was coated with zinc, neither should be with acidic foods because it leeches and gives a taste. If that happens to you, and you'd like to try plating, it be cool to see them gold plated. I love the warm look of your cup.
They came out great!
Brilliant they look really good 👍
To use a copper mug all you need to do it is coat the inside with a thin film of Beeswax, While melting the beeswax, put the copper mug or cup in boiling water until HOT then dry the mug. Pour the melted beeswax in the hot mug/cup, and make sure to coat the entire inside with beeswax and pour out the remaining wax. With a thin film of beeswax, the toxic compounds you get by adding Copper to most alcoholic beverage never happens and you can safely drink from your copper mug/cup without fear. Same trick works for sealing a drinking Horn.
Great project! Cheers! 🍻
Those cups look awesome.
I love this design super cool
I've been 3d printing for a couple of years, and this is a great project!!! What kind of filament did you use? Was it straight pla? I only ask because there are a lot of variations and I've never thought about what would completely burn the best. It feels a bit devious 3d printing something that I will literally destroy, but yet I'm excited to try this!!!
They look great!
They look great. Can you coat them to prevent the patina from forming over time?
Copper is one of the few metals I like
Beautiful , not for coffee. Great video.
Do you use any kind of flux when melting your copper? It helps in a lot of ways, like making it easier to skim floating slag of the top before casting.