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Thread: Thin steel pot for smelting 500lbs at once?

  1. #1
    Boolit Master
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    Thin steel pot for smelting 500lbs at once?

    I have a bunch of misc. range scrap ingots that I'd like to melt into a single 500lb batch for the sake of consistent alloy. The cheapest pots of such volume are at Walmart. They are stainless steel but the steel is pretty thin and 500lbs is a lot of weight. I'm thinking the pot would probably do it but what do you guys think? Any engineers here who can tell me how thick a stainless pot wall has to be for enough strength?

  2. #2
    Boolit Buddy

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    I am not an engineer. Lead melts at 6-700 degrees. steel is good for approx. 2,000.

    500 Lbs of lead could be as small as 1.5 feet cubed about 3.3 cu ft Sounds laike a big lobster pot IF it and your burner can take 500 lbs.
    Go easy

  3. #3
    Boolit Master
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    All I can say is if you're worried about it, don't do it. A pot failure would be not only very costly but also very dangerous. 500lbs of lead can hold enough heat to start a pretty mean fire. This is an area where one should err on the safe side. If you'll be melting 500 lbs at a time often it's worth getting an expensive but very solid pot, and if you're not it's not a big deal to do a few different batches with a smaller, less expensive but still very solid pot.

    I wish I were an engineer with the appropriate calculations to give you more useful information.

  4. #4
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    I must be reading the post wrong. Even if you could get 500 pounds melted in one batch, how would you pour or handle it? I must need more sleep. Rod

  5. #5
    Boolit Master D Crockett's Avatar
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    Oreo I do not have a pot that will do 500 but I do have one that will do around 200 or I can make you one that will hold around 250 but that is a lot of lead that your burner will have to hold if you have a turkey fryer from Wal-marts I would have the out side frame of it reinforced with angle iron. in this game you have to think SAFETY SAFETY SAFETY give me a pm if I can help you D Crockett

  6. #6
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    Get yourself a old Freon drum and cut the top off. A 30# on a gas turkey fryer works great but the 50# are even better. And as D. Crocket says, beef up the stand with angle iron because who needs a accident.

  7. #7
    Boolit Master
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    The stand, burner, and fire hazard are not an issue. I just don't want the pot to let loose while I'm standing next to it. This would be a one-time thing so I don't want to spend too much money or effort on it. If it won't work I won't do it.

    In my mind the engineering is not so different then calculating water pressure vs. pipe strength. But as was said, 500lb of molten lead is nothing to trifle with. I must be certain or I don't do it. If someone here is familiar with these types of calculations that would help me a lot.

  8. #8
    Boolit Grand Master

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    I don't know if I would trust a thin steel pot holding 500# or not. My pot will hold 400# and is around 3/8 in thick. If you are young and may do this for several more years, I would suggest having a heavy duty pot built. Also consider the strength of your burner stand. Enough on safety, the others have already covered that.

    If I were to start over, I would find a large propane tank (maybe 250 gallon) or an old air compressor tank, cut it off and weld legs on it. Think heavy and strong!

    Good Luck with your decision. Show us what you decide to do.

  9. #9
    Boolit Grand Master

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    Another thing to consider is doing smaller batches and ID ingots to batch number then add the same number from each batch to your casting pot to maintain consistency. Run 5 batches of 100 lbs 2 1lb ingots from batch 12345 equals 10 lbs in the casting pot and will work to have the same alloy everytime

  10. #10
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    You can rest the pot on bricks to take the weight off of the turkey fryer and IF YOU PRE-HEAT and use a sawed off 20# propane tank which will hold over 100# at a shot. You can get a pretty consistent batch by refilling with more material when the pot gets down to 1/2 full. Have to pre-heat the material to be added in order to make sure it is totally dry, piece of range scrap taking water below the melt will give you a dangerous visit from the tinsel fairy. Use a shovel with a long handle to add material, face shield, gloves etc.

    If you really want consistency in an easier and safer manner use the 20# propane tank to do large ingots (say bread loaf pan sized) from each batch and keep ingots from each batch separate, label as A,B,C, etc. once cooled. Probably do 500# in 4 or at the most 5 batches with propane tank pot with no need to risk adding material to a half full pot. To make a pot of finished bullet material take one ingot from each batch and melt together. If every batch of material you cast from has an ingot from each pot then your casting material will be consistent.

    Assuming 10# ingots 5 of those (1 from each batch) should fit fine in a Dutch oven on a regular turkey fryer to be re-poured into usable sized ingots of completely blended material as needed. Or as a separate operation if you wanted to process the whole 500# and be done with it. Same process as country gent described but bigger ingots. (we were both working on our post at the same time)

    I think D Crockette sells those pots ready made at a reasonable price, thread on his equipment in swapping and selling people seemed pleased with his product. Give him a PM. If nothing else instead of buying a disposable and possibly unsafe Chinese made pot from wal-mart you would have a re-usable propane tank pot with a market value if you decided to sell it later.
    Last edited by RogerDat; 03-06-2015 at 12:54 PM. Reason: reference post that was made same time
    Scrap.... because all the really pithy and emphatic four letter words were taken and we had to describe this source of casting material somehow so we added an "S" to what non casters and wives call what we collect.

    Kind of hard to claim to love America while one is hating half the Americans that disagree with you. One nation indivisible requires work.

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  11. #11
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    A pot built from a propane tank would be cheap to make. They're about 12" diameter and you can figure the part where the sides are straight at about 46 lbs to the inch. Need good support system and a heat system to match. Doable though.
    Mike

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  12. #12
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    The height of the column of molten lead makes a big difference in the amount of stress placed on the walls of the pot. The pressure against the walls of a vessel at any point is the fluid density multiplied by the height. A tall, skinny pot filled with a tall column of lead will have a higher wall stress than a short, wide pot with a shorter column of lead. Once the maximum pressure is calculated you need to use that to calculate the hoop stress that is trying to cause the walls to fail (under tension). Remember that even stainless steel loses a lot of strength at elevated temperatures, and becomes more ductile (stretches and deforms easier).

    None of these calculations is difficult to do, but you have to know your pot size and so forth to solve.

    My gut feeling is that if things like this make me nervous I DON'T DO THEM. I would work with smaller batches, a thicker vessel, etc.

  13. #13
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    come on man a 500lb ingot of lead. How do you plan on remelting it?

  14. #14
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    Fella at the scrapyard picked up a 55gal steel drum with a forklift pinching the sides of the drum with the forks. He set it on the scale to check weight. 1800lbs. Picked it up and loaded it in my truck. Other then the collapse of the sides, the bottom was not affected. I use 55gal drums for ingot storage but fully support the bottom. Mine were free but they sell for scrap steel price in my area.

  15. #15
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    Do smaller batches!!!!! I would never attempt over 100# at a time. No matter what the pot is made of.

    I never mix huge batches of alloy because someday I will probably want to change it and I am stuck with it. I mix my alloys in my casting pot from the basic materials to get me to the mix I want using the alloy calc spreadsheet. Works ever time for me!

    banger-j

  16. #16
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    In this case the OP has a 500# pile of one alloy source, range scrap and wants to get it consistent across the whole 500# so when casting it the batches don't vary in hardness based on what type of bullet was in that particular small batch pot. The typical problem of mixing big batch of alloy and later finding out you wish you still had some of the ingredients separate for a different use probably does not apply.

    All I can think of is really big batch, impractical to my way of thinking and possibly unsafe. Or smaller batches segregated then blended with equal amounts from each smaller batch. More work but safer and should yield good consistency. It is all range scrap so I doubt there would be a huge variation between any two 100# batchs but one never knows. Could find a few BHN between the hardest and the softest 100# pot. Second smelting with some from each batch should deal with that.
    Scrap.... because all the really pithy and emphatic four letter words were taken and we had to describe this source of casting material somehow so we added an "S" to what non casters and wives call what we collect.

    Kind of hard to claim to love America while one is hating half the Americans that disagree with you. One nation indivisible requires work.

    Feedback page http://castboolits.gunloads.com/show...light=RogerDat

  17. #17
    Boolit Master
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    Quote Originally Posted by rickys2 View Post
    come on man a 500lb ingot of lead. How do you plan on remelting it?
    I feel like it should be obvious that my plan is to ladle the whole batch back into small ingots once blended. What would anyone ever do with a single 500lb chunk of lead?

    I have some different alloys that I will keep segregated. I have quite a bit of reclaimed No.2 shot and likely more coming. That will remain segregated because I know what it is and it's different enough from anything else I have. I have a batch of high tin content, solder of some kind. I don't have anything with higher antimony content. I'll have to purchase some if I ever need it. And then there's all this range scrap I mined myself from several different berms and smelted in several batches that I never kept track of. Its all different enough to warrant blending but not different enough to warrant sorting and segregating. It's pretty good base alloy for most shooting I do that I can use the other stuff to adjust as needed.

    Melting and remelting a bunch of different 100lb batches is too much work and time. I just need to find a suitable pot or not do it.

  18. #18
    Boolit Man
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    Has anyone tried to melt this much? I have a very large (700lb by my figuring) pot and a 250k burner. A lid is obvious for heat retention, but it has also been suggested to firebrick around the pot to insulate. Anyone with ant experience?

  19. #19
    Boolit Buddy Newboy's Avatar
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    I have done maybe 750 pounds before. I only had a 30 gallon steel drum, and used that. No problem. They look like the 55 gallon drums, just smaller. I was concerned about the seams and thin metal, but it worked fine. Ended up with nice homogenous ingots.

  20. #20
    Boolit Master
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    I had tooled around once with an r134a drum that I was wanting to use. I put a tourch to it on a low heat setting to get it warm enough to make a nice cut. The steel was so thin that it started cutting during the warming process. I don't know if that drum was a particularly thin drum, but it sure seemed flimsy. Not what I expected at all. I wouldn't smelt water in that old drum. I'm sure there are some better ones because they seem like a popular option for smelting. I just wasn't feeling too good about how it started to fall apart so quickly on a low heat setting. Be cautious about the quality of some refrigerant drums.

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