I acquired 60 lbs of lead today, but was not told where it came from. So far, all I have dealt with is wheel weights and range scrap. Is this roofing lead or what precisely?
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I acquired 60 lbs of lead today, but was not told where it came from. So far, all I have dealt with is wheel weights and range scrap. Is this roofing lead or what precisely?
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Looks like roofing or shower base/water seal.. Is it dead soft?
Definately looks like roofing or xray room sheet lead. Most likely soft. If you can bend it and easily deform it then it safe to say its soft lead and almost pure.
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"Speak softly and carry a big stick; you will go far."
~Theodore Roosevelt~
Mikes around .37 inches thick and is very easy to bend. Guess it is time buy some rotometals super hard.
Or lino.
I keep lino and tin on hand for alloying.
Looks like soft flashing, pan or shielding sheets.
The larger piece in the foreground is definitely chimney flashing and, most likely, pure lead. Positive of this because, until he sold out and retired, a good buddy was a roofing contractor and I used to find a bucket or two of the stuff in my driveway every now and then. Still got a couple hundred pounds, fluxed and cast into ingots, stacked in the corner of my workshop.
Bill
"I'm not often right but I've never been wrong."
Jimmy Buffett
"Scarlet Begonias"
Step flashing. Where the shingles end butt into a vertical surface. 7"x7" up to 10"x12" when flattened. Usually dead soft.
you can weigh that lead after you clean it up and add 2 times that amount of clip on ww and still have good usable bullet lead I have done that many times D Crockett
OR............. if you shoot a muzzle loader, you have a good start.
Guys, it could be old telephone cable sheath or lead sleeve for a splice case. Got a piece laying on my desk right now. Easily bent with the hand and is pure lead I believe.
Rosewood
Evangelical, deplorable redneck and proud of it.
I picked up 320 lb of lead that looked exactly like that from the local junk yard a few weeks ago at .80 per pound. There was sections which had a thin layer of plywood stuck to it, so I assumed it came from roofing...but it was soft. I cut it into manageable strips, folded and pounded it into flat squares to fit easily in the melting pot. Haven't done a hardness test on the ingots yet, but the ingots have a blue hue to them..the lead had a rainbow effect on the surface when melted, so pretty sure it's close to pure lead. 320 lbs melted down to 307 lbs of ingots. Plan on mixing it with some coww and add either pewter or foundry type I have on hand for an alloy.
Have you melted it yet ? My friend and I obtained lead sheet from a local scrap dealer that looked like that, and it contained contained cadmium. We had to return it. Cadmium is cancer causing, real cancer causing, not "known to the state of California to cause cancer" like ordinary table is in California.
I agree with the others that it is some form of sheet lead. Maybe roof flashing, maybe something from a shower, maybe from an X-Ray room, maybe even cable sheathing. Which ever it is, it should be very soft. Personally, I would smelt it together in one batch and make it as PB. Then later on you have the option to use it as is or to blend it with harder stuff. Nice Score!
Last edited by lightman; 03-12-2018 at 08:26 AM.
You should be able to mark it with your fingernail if dead soft. It will make your wheel weight stash last lots longer.
Information not shared. is wasted.
One of the older Lyman books listed cable sheathing as 98-98.5% lead. Thats a little harder than stick on weights and sheet lead but still soft enough to use most places suitable for soft lead. I've killed several deer with round balls cast from cable.
We will seldom get pure unless we buy it from a foundry. I like the term "plain" or "soft" lead and use it as pure. Little bit of Sb used by manufacturer to help it form or some joint solder someplace in the melt isn't a problem for most of what we do.
Big batches are key. That way you have your "plain" ingots to use and they will be consistent throughout the whole batch so your recipes using them will be consistent.
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
It's really just an excuse to buy some super hard anyway
Where do you actually find -type? Other than ebay.
This is not cable sheating;cable sheating looks like....a cable with a hole in it's center..
This is roof flashing and it is quite soft,pure lead(5 to 5.5 BHN).Perfect for black powder guns,perfect to alloy with tin and antimony,perfect with 50% wheel weights and still perfect with 20 to 25% lyno,more than perfect if alloyed with above mentionned and water cooled,perfect for.....well,I think you got the point.Nice find!
BP | Bronze Point | IMR | Improved Military Rifle | PTD | Pointed |
BR | Bench Rest | M | Magnum | RN | Round Nose |
BT | Boat Tail | PL | Power-Lokt | SP | Soft Point |
C | Compressed Charge | PR | Primer | SPCL | Soft Point "Core-Lokt" |
HP | Hollow Point | PSPCL | Pointed Soft Point "Core Lokt" | C.O.L. | Cartridge Overall Length |
PSP | Pointed Soft Point | Spz | Spitzer Point | SBT | Spitzer Boat Tail |
LRN | Lead Round Nose | LWC | Lead Wad Cutter | LSWC | Lead Semi Wad Cutter |
GC | Gas Check |