The size and temperature capability of  your furnace should meet your needs. Most of my is done in aluminum which melts at 1300F.  My small Flower Pot Furnace will have aluminum ready to pour in about 20 minutes, where as my large 15 pound furnace will take hours before it’s ready. Finally I needed a furnace that could reach 3000F so I could pour Brass and Iron. So think about the projects you plan to do. All three of these furnaces are documented below.

Brass and Iron Furnace – 3000F

For the hotter metals like NiBrAl at 2300F to Iron at 3000F must use a clay or silicon carbide crucible. So your foundry gets built around the crucible.  An A30 crucible is about 8 5/8″ diameter and 11 1/2″ tall and can hold 66 pounds of brass, 21 pounds of aluminum.  The #35 crucibles we got from Legend;  www.lmine.com are even larger at 9 1/2″ diameter and 12.5″ tall.  So we’ll be sure to have enough metal to cast our propeller blades and most everything else you find on a boat.

We visited our local Canfield & Joseph foundry supplier and spoke with Jeff Trenholm. who was an excellent resource for investment and furnace supplies. We came home with $400 worth of materials to build a furnace that is light enough that we can take it on the boat.  The trick to light weight is ceramic cloth and insulating firebrick or IFB. Jeff also supplied us with design plans for a larger crucible furnace. My original plan was based on designs from the metal casting forums that used 1″ of castable refractory for a hot face with 2″ of ceramic cloth behind that.  The professional recommendation from Jeff was a more like 6 inch walls at least 4 inches of castable refractory, but after I explained that light weight was critical, Jeff ran the thermal figures on insulated firebrick or IFB with a couple of inches of ceramic fiber behind it.  The lid be only ceramic fiber.  The thermal numbers put the outside skin temperature at about 500 degrees.  The down side is that this design will not do well for routinely casting iron at 3000F but it will easily do brass and NiBrAl at 2600F in the furnace in order to get the melt to about 2100F.

Professional Furnace Plans

Professional Furnace Plans

Oil Drum Furnace

Oil Drum Furnace

A 55 gallon Oil Drum will be the outer shell. With a 9.5″ diameter crucible it will have enough room for 5″ of firebrick and ceramic fiber with a couple of inches of space for the tongs to reach in a grab the crucible.

Materials List
2 – 55 gallon Oil Drums
1 – 55 lb bag MetalKast 70 castable refactory. Instructions for using MetalKast 70
1 – 55 lb pail Sairset refractory mortar (Only need 1/2)
1 box Ceramic Fiber Blanket – Cerablanket, 2 x 150 x 24″, 25 sqft, 8 lb/cuft
40 – 2600F Insulated Firebricks, measuring: 2.5 x 4.5 x 9″
4 – TIG welding stainless steel filler rods or 12 ft of 1/8″ diameter stainless steel wire.

Note:  Store Sairset in a cool location.  The shelf life is 12 months and it must be tightly sealed if you plan to keep what you do not use. Mix thoroughly and use thin brick joints for best results. Each joint should be completely filled with mortar.

 


Cut and oil drum to about 21″ depending on the
size of the firebricks you get.

We used a masonry saw to cut the fire brick but a
hand saw will do the trick.  Don’t breath the dust!

Insulating Fire Brick or IFB cut to fit the bottom
of the oil drum.

Cover the bung holes and trowel in some Sairset
and start laying in the bricks.

Lay the IFB with thin joints.  ..and work fast
because it dries fast.

Cerablanket Ceramic Fiber Insulation cuts easily
with a serrated blade and is fit against the inside
of the oil drum

Set the Cerablanket in place.

With a block under one side of the fire brick it’s
easy to cut them into a wedge shape for the walls
of the furnace.  I had a 40 mph wind, but this is
when you should use a respriator.

A couple of 12″ round boards are used as jigs.
Cut the last brick once the others are in place as
the mortar adds about 3/4″.

The lid was made from 4 inches of the bottom of
the barrel because the bottom has no bungs. A 5″
hole was cut though the metal,  4″ of Cerablanket
was fit inside and a ring of sheet metal welded on
in order to hold the Cerablanket in place.

4″ was cut off the bottom of a second 55 gallon
oil drum and that was welded to the bottom of the
furnace after 4″ of Cerablanket was placed inside.

Stainless steel TIG welding filler rods are welded
to the bottom of the lid and bent so they lap over
the Cerablanket around the furnace vent hole.

Metal flashing is used to make a form for
Metalcast-70 castable refractory. This will
prevent damage to the Cerablanket when adding
metal and also protect the stainless wire.

Castable refractory covers the exposed
Cerablanket around the top of the furnace.

The remaining bag of castable refractory sealed
around the burner hole and make assorted plinths
which will support the crucibles.

The fire bricks were trimmed level with the
refractory.

A hinge for the lid and lifting handles were added.

 


In the back are the crucible lifting tongs used to
lift the crucible out of the furnace and onto a
plinth where it is lifted by two people using the
pouring shank in front. The piece of square tube
on the pouring shank slides over the top lip of the
crucible to keep it from falling out when it’s tilted
over.In the photo to the right are tongs for
adding metal to the crucible, a fluxing tool which
is just an end cap on a metal stick that pushed flux
to the bottom of the crucible.

Next is a skimmer to skim off the dross that floats
to the top of the melt, and finally a plate to push
any remaining dross or cover flux away from the
edge of the crucible when pouring the metal.
First Melt

It’s an exciting day when you get to try out your new furnace with a real part. Especially when that part will save you $3,400. It will pay for the $1000 furnace and new $2400 metal lathe.

We are using a clay graphite crucible from Legend.

3000 Degree Propane/Diesel/Oil Burner

To reach 3000 degrees, you will need more that just a propane burner. Fortunately Super Dave; not his real name, who lives just 100 miles away in Oklahoma City has worked out the details of a great propane and waste oil, forced air burner. Super Dave’s background is in asphalt plants so burners is something he know a lot about, so and I finally pried him into building me a copy of his burner. 🙂

The burner pipe needs to be at least 2 inches ID, but larger will work too. And it’s 16 inches long, but it can be longer or shorter as needed. And it will work without the tabulator, or you can fabricate your own from sheet metal, there is no magic to it.
Suppliers:
www.patriot-supply.com

Burner Parts:
Siphon Type SNA Air Atomizing Nozzle, .75 gal/hr, Hago Delavan Part Number: 30609-8    $25
Adapter for Nozzle: Hago Delavan Part Number: 17147  $24

Large Aluminum Furnace -1500F

My foundry started from reading several of the very good web sites available on the topic. See the links at the bottom of this page.

I wanted to melt upwards to 15 pounds of aluminum so I started with a crucible (the actual melting pot) that is a little bigger than a standard #10 crucible. My crucible is made from a 6 inch by 1/4 inch thick steel pipe with a 1/2 inch plate of steel welded onto the bottom. After a trip to the local junk dealer, the metal scrap yard, and a foundry supplier I had all of the parts. I made a simple burner using parts from the turkey fryer burner I picked up and used to melt lead. A couple of of 30 gallon oil drums ($4 each) from the local junk dealer would form the body, and Mizzou Castable Refractory from a local supplier provides the heat resistant insulation.

I had been working mainly with with aluminum up to this point. Cutting steel with my Dewalt cut-off saw wore out to $90 blade is short order. Since it cost $40 to sharpen I had an excuse to buy an acetylene touch but I decided to first try a cutoff blade in my grinder first. Harbor Freight sells a box of 25 – 7 inch metal cutting disk for $14, and a cheep angel grinder will cost $20 to $30. Surprisingly the cut-off blades worked great.

(1) One of the 30 gallon drums was cut off at 18 inches to make the bottom of the furnace. Angle iron was added for 4 legs and to support a pipe that would be the hinge for the lid. The oil drums are 14 inches in diameter which is just right for my 6+ in wide crucible + 1 inch of space between the crucible and the refractory so that the refractory is about 2 1/2 inches thick.

(2) The lid is 2 1/2 inches cut off of another barrel. These barrels have lids like paint cans, so instead of trying to weld on a lid I just used another $4 barrel. Others have used pressure storage tanks used by household water well systems and except that these are rounded on the top, I think they are a better solution; unless you are good at welding on the thin metal that the 30 gallon barrels are make from. I am not.

Angle iron frame around 30 gal drum

(1) Angle iron frame around 30 gal drum

 

 

(3) Mizzou Castable Refractory poured in and vibrated by the table saw underneath.

(3) Mizzou Castable Refractory poured in and vibrated by the table saw underneath.


(5) Inside form made by  wrapping flashing around wood furring strips that are glued to the  steel crucible.

(5) Inside form made by wrapping flashing around wood furring strips that are glued to the steel crucible.


(7) With the burner pipe in place, Mizzou is added and vibrated.

(7) With the burner pipe in place, Mizzou is added and vibrated.


(9) Curing the Mizzouz is done  by slowing increasing the heat  over several nights.

(9) Curing the Mizzouz is done by slowing increasing the heat over several nights.

(2) Pipe frame welded to the top of the oil drum lid with rods to reinforce the Mizzou and a bottle to form the vent.

(2) Pipe frame welded to the top of the oil drum lid with rods to reinforce the Mizzou and a bottle to form the vent.


(4) Mizzou poured 3 inches deep into the bottom, with a hole left to drain the metal should the crucible fail.

(4) Mizzou poured 3 inches deep into the bottom, with a hole left to drain the metal should the crucible fail.


(6) Steel pipe for the burner. It is shaped to fit up against the inside form around the crucible.

(6) Steel pipe for the burner. It is shaped to fit up against the inside form around the crucible.


(8) Leftover Mizzou is used to  make a flower pot furnace and plinths.

(8) Leftover Mizzou is used to make a flower pot furnace and plinths.

Mizzou Castable Refractory

Refractory is the material you use to insolate your foundry. You can make your own refractory  but I was having problems finding the materials, so I went the lazy route and purchased Mizzou Castable Refractory.  As much as this stuff looks like concrete, it is not concrete, it also has a 30 day self life, which is your ticket to a low price.

When I went to return a couple of unused bags of Mizzou I saw they had a complete pallet of the stuff sitting out in the rain because it had gone over its 30 expiration date, they would have let me use that for free. I asked why they had so much of it on hand, and it turns out they make crematorium pans, which are the slabs that go under the body when it is placed into the furnace.  The employee then pointed to a metal building on the other side of the loading yard with 2 large stacks belching smoke and explained that they also run a crematorium.

Read the instructions! Mizzou is mainly alumina, which is aluminum oxide.  Wear a respirator, gloves and wash up after using it. It took 4, 55 lb bags at $27 each  to complete my furnace.

You only use 5 pints of water for each 55 lb bag so it looks like very dry concrete.  The trick is to vibrate this stuff, and if you have an old table saw then you have the perfect vibrator.  Just lower the blade, cover it with plastic, turn it on, and let it vibrate your refractory.

(3) I poured the lid first so I could see how it worked on a small part. You can see the small steel bars welded in to reinforce the refractory . This is only done in the lid, so that the refractory is supported when it eventually cracks. A butane torch with a piece of cardboard wrapped around it sticks through a hole in the lid. This will form the site hole and vent in the top.

(4) The bottom is poured next, it is 3 inches thick. A 3/4 inch PVC pipe sticks down through a hole in the center to act as a drain should the crucible fail. Small channels were also formed into the refractory to help channel molten metal to the center drain.

(5) While the bottom was drying I made a crucible or melting pot, from a 6 inch steel pipe with 1/2 inch plate steel welded on the bottom. The crucible was then used to make the center form for the refractory. Wooded strips 1 inch wide were glued to the crucible with dabs of Liquid Nails and then those were wrapped with aluminum flashing. The flashing was cut and folded over to close off the top in order to make it easier to shovel in the refectory without have to try and miss the opening to the center form.

(6)(7) With the bottom dried, the center form was set in place along with the burner inlet pipe which is a 2 inch steel pipe shaped to fit the curve of the center form.  It is held in place with Liquid Nails and a piece of metal that is inserted in the pipe and  pierces the center form.

(8) I had enough leftovers to make several plinths and a flower pot furnace. Plinths are small blocks that support the crucible above the bottom of the furnace. The flower pot furnace is so named because it is simply a couple of flower pots lined with Mizzou. The flower pot furnace is great for small jobs because is heats up in about 10 minutes.

(9) Curing will be many hours spent gradually heating up the furnace.  The Mizzou Refactory came with a very specific set of instructions but I did it over multiple evenings, using heat lamps the first couple of nights, then the next night I started with the burner.  About 5 or so hours with the burner pulled back out of the burner pipe, turned down low and only partially venting through the pipe.  In order to achieve 250 degrees F, then higher temperatures on 4 consecutive nights until we were melting aluminum.  After the first 3 hours above 250, steam was escaping from my porous welding job, so I would not recommend any faster curing than several days.

Propane Burner

(10) My burner is made from an aluminum 2 inch to 3/4 inch reducing bell turned on my lathe, but that is just because I could not find an 1 1/2 x 3/4 inch reducing bell at one of the local plumbing supply houses and I wanted to play on the lathe.  The center is an 8 inch long 3/4 inch nipple, and the flare is a 1 inch by 3/4 inch reducer.  I cut the threads out of the 1 inch side of this bell on the lathe, but I doubt that was necessary.  I just borrowed the 5 PSI regulator hose and orifice from my bargain turkey fryer I picked up for melting lead.  You can also dispense with the regulator. You will get more gas when you want it, but you will have to control the  flame with the valve on the tank and that is not easy to do.

(11) I welded a small cross piece in the large end of the aluminum bell, then drilled an tapped a hole in the center that would fit the gas hose.  I made a butterfly valve to regulate the air entering the bell, but it turned out to not be needed.

(10) Burner make from 3/4 inch pipe, a 1 inch by 3/4 reducer on one end and a bell turned from aluminum on the other. A brace is welded into the bell and that is drilled and threaded for the gas hose.

(10) Burner make from 3/4 inch pipe, a 1 inch by 3/4 reducer on one end and a bell turned from aluminum on the other. A brace is welded into the bell and that is drilled and threaded for the gas hose.

 

 

(12) Harbor Freight Propane

(12) Harbor Freight Propane
“Fires of Hell” Torch -$30


(14) Hooks on a swivel latch onto ears on the crucible to lift it from the foundry.

(14) Hooks on a swivel latch onto ears on the crucible to lift it from the foundry.

 

 

(16) Crucible tilted for pouring.

(16) Crucible tilted for pouring.

(11) Bell end of the burner

(11) Bell end of the burner


(13) Tool used to lift the crucible out of the foundry.

(13) Tool used to lift the crucible out of the foundry.


(15) Tilting arm that is welded to  the handle is rotated down to tilt the crucible for pouring.

(15) Tilting arm that is welded to the handle is rotated down to tilt the crucible for pouring.


(17) Wheels added, and a lid  keeps the rain out so it can be  stored outside.

(17) Wheels added, and a lid keeps the rain out so it can be stored outside.

I also welded 6 small bits of flat steel onto the 8 inch nipple. This keeps the burner centered in the burner pipe which allows for additional air flow around the outside of the burner. One of the tabs of steel is notched to prevent the burner from sliding too far into the burner pipe. Make sure to keep the gas turned up enough to keep the flame burning only at the flared end of the burner. If too low the flame will burn back through the 3/4 inch pipe and start burning inside the intake bell. This will cause the gas hose fitting to over heat and it would soon melt of and catch fire. The propane tank would be next and after that blows up you would not need to worry any more.

I tested the foundry with a small melt and it worked great. I takes 30 minutes to melt a couple of pounds and over an hour for about 8 pounds. Larger burners will do the job in 15 minutes and that seems important to many people, but there is always something else to do other that watch the water boil. Also you really do not want the aluminum to get much hotter that it’s melting point of 1300 degrees. I tried adding a blower taken from a discarded dryer, in order to force more air thought the burner and increase the efficiency, but just a small amount of additional air caused the burner to blow out.

(12) I recently purchased a propane torch from Harbor Freight; www.harborfreight.com, for $30. It has a knob that can adjust the flame and no regulator. This thing is like is the fires of Hell compared to my old burner. Go get one and see what the preacher has been talking about!

Crucible Tool

(13) The design is a hybrid of a couple of others I saw. It has 2 hooks that can reach down into the furnace and catch 3/4″ studs welded onto the top outside edges of the crucible. The hooks are welded to a 7″ piece of pipe that swivels on the tools handle. (14) (15) Once the crucible is lifted out of the furnace the handle is rotated allowing the hooks to swivel and the tilting arm which is welded to the handle to rotate down and catch the bottom of the crucible. (16) The crucible can now be tilted for the pour. The photos are only a demonstration, I’d be wearing gloves if this was real, and the spots on the crucible are just ash from the Liquid Nails that was used to hold the wood furring strips in place when the crucible was being use as part of the from to cast the furnace.

If I had to do this again I might build my furnace so that the lid included about 3 inches of the side of the furnace. This would increase the weigh of the lid, but the crucible tool would be much simpler. I could then cut holes in the side of your crucible and just slide end of the tool through the holes. You would want some notches in the tool to help keep the crucible from sliding off but you eliminate the need for the swivel, the hooks, and the the studs on the crucible.

(17)  I finally got tired of dragging the foundry around while stepping over the engine stand laying in my drive way, and 15 minutes latter the rest of the engine stand is in the scrap pile and its wheels are welded onto the foundry. What a wonderful improvement. Just tilt her back and roll it out of the way. The original oil drum lid is to help keep some of the rain out.

Flower Pot Furnace – Aluminum 1500F

(1) When I was building my large foundry I had some left over Mizzou Castable Refractory and so I made some plinths and a flower pot furnace.  The flower pots were just normal clay pots borrowed from a pile the neighbor had beside his house.  Ok, I stole them.


(1) Two flower pots lined with
Mizzou Castable Refractory.

(2) The clay was removed and
holes drilled of the burner and
vent.

(3) Using the same propane
burner that heats the big furnace.
heats
(4) A gas cylinder cap is used for
a crucible.

(5) A rod passes through holes
near the top of the crucible.

(6) A tilting arm on the handle is
rotated down to pour.

(2) I finally needed just a small amount of melt, so I finished making the Flower Pot Foundry which still needed a burner hole and a sight/vent hole.  I used a standard 1/2 masonry drill bit and drilled several holes to make a crude hole about 1 1/2 inches wide for the burner and several more in the the top for a vent.

(3) The burner is only resting on steel and the flame directed through the burner hole. (4)  The crucible is made from a gas cylinder cap I found on the high way, and a couple of bits of steel have been welded in to close off the holes on it’s sides.  Another couple of bits of angle have been welded to the bottom to support it off the bottom of the furnace. (5) Finally two new 1/2 inch holes have been drilled at the upper lip, which allow the crucible to be lifted with a custom crucible tool.  (6) The crucible tool is a jack handle with a 3/8 inch bolt welded onto the end and then the bolts head was cut down so that it became a slight hook in order to prevent the crucible from sliding off.  An couple of pieces of flat bar are also welded to the handle so that when the tool is rotated they catch the bottom of the crucible in order to tilt it for pouring.

I didn’t have to remove the clay flower pot from the castable refractory; just heating it up once for about 4 minutes to help cure the refractory did that for me.  This refractory had been sitting in a dry spot for months so curing was not much of an issue, otherwise the refractory comes with very specific instructions for curing.

(3) This is the same burner I use in my larger foundry with is converted from a turkey fryer. The details for the larger foundry and burner are described above.  The large furnace is great for melting up to 15 pounds but takes almost 2 hours and unfortunately it also takes about 30 minutes to melt just a couple of pounds because it takes a while to heat up all that refractory.  On the other hand the Flower Pot Foundry melts a couple of pounds in just 15 minutes.  There are always plenty of things to do around the shop, so it’s not that I am in a rush, but I am cheep and the quicker melt time saves on propane. Not only that but handling the small crucible is much, much easier so pouring funnels are not necessary.

Flux and Degassing

N400 for Brass and N600 for Aluminum (pdf)

Links

http://www.lmine.com Legend – # 35 Budget Graphite Crucible $60
http://manufacturing.stanford.edu  “How Everyday Things Are Made” (Covers Casting)
www.backyardmetalcasting.com Back Yard Metal Casting
http://metalcast.boorman.us Brians Metal Casting Project (Well documented plans)
www.budgetcastingsupply.com  Budget Casting Supply Links
www.buildyouridea.com/foundry/lost_foam_howto/lost_foam_howto.html  Lost Foam How To
www.dansworkshop.com Hot Wire Lathe and Foundry

Suppliers:

Gypsum Solutions www.gypsumsolutions.com   Local Distributor: Independent Materials, 34 N Owasso Ave.  Tulsa, OK 74120  Phone 918-582-0196 – Casting Plaster and Molding Plaster (Plaster of Paris)  $20/100 lbs
Ryder Brick,  14601 S Memorial Dr, PO Box 550, Bixby, OK 918-366-8200 – Firebrick  9×4.5×2  $1.10 each
Canfield & Joseph Inc, 6536 E 42nd Tulsa, OK  918-663-8380
Petrobond Pre-Mix .60/lb (50lb box). Warehoused in Kansas City
100lbs Petrobond Pre-Mix is $60 + $34.64 shipping + 5.11 tax = $99.75 (May 2004)
Bryant Industrial, 6802 S 65th West Ave, Tulsa, OK 74131  Phone 918 446-1481  – Mazzo Refactory Mix 55# 26.95
www.creativepackagingok.com Polystyrene Foam 4′ x 8′ x 40″ (Bun) for $179.20
Budget Casting Supply  http://budgetcastingsupply.com   Petrobond Pre-Mix 100lb box is $124 (May 2004)