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Thread: Cleaning a ladle

  1. #1
    Boolit Grand Master Bazoo's Avatar
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    Cleaning a ladle

    What does everyone else do to keep their ladles clean? Mine (a Lyman) rusts between casting sessions unless I cast often. I clean it once in a while with a wire brush on the inside and outside. I've not tried remoil but I use it in my moulds so I'm thinking it would do the trick. Any other ideas?

    Thanks

    Bazoo

  2. #2
    Boolit Buddy
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    I leave my Lyman buried in the lead as it solidifies. It warms to the right temp the next time I fire up the pot.

  3. #3
    Boolit Buddy
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    I find it really doesn't matter. Recently I used a higher tin alloy (~6%) and it completely coated the ladle in a thin, even layer of alloy, which is neat.

    I usually spray them down with WD40 after i'm done but I think the rust is fairly irrelevant.

  4. #4
    Boolit Grand Master GhostHawk's Avatar
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    Wire brush on the bench grinder once a year. Use an old knife to scrape off any hard to reach spots. Steel wool to polish.

    Then give it a good coat of BLL or thinned alox and let it cure. Lead does not like to stick to that stuff. It cures/hardens to almost a enamel finish.

    Then a good rap when it is hot against the side of the pot will see most lead release from the ladle.

    Works on sprue's that have a sticky spot and like to hang onto lead too. Polish first with steel wool then coat with thinned alox.

  5. #5
    Boolit Grand Master

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    I scrape out the insides with the small end of a small file and scrape the outsides with a larger file .
    Use coarse sandpaper and anything else to get crud off the ladle and spout .
    Wire brush to finish up .

    If you have a spray can of the nasty black spray on mould release (mine says Midway Drop Out Mold Release Agent) that you haven't dumped in the trash...it mucks up a mould but Spray a coating on the insides and outsides of your clean ladle . Stops rust and nothing sticks to the ladle ... The stuff should be marketed as Ladle Spray...works great .

    If you don't have the black stuff spray it with a Dry Lubricant...give it two coats . After a casting session give it another coat after the ladle has cooled before putting away .

    Not sure how long the dry lube will last but the black drop out stuff hangs on for many casting sessions . I sprayed a new Lyman Ladle with some and after at least 6 casting sessions have not had to recoat it...no rust either .
    Gary
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  6. #6
    Boolit Grand Master

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    I have cleaned ladles several ways.

    At work we used the sand blasting cabinet to clean die casts ladles when needed. I have done this with my ladles also. it does good and will slowly smooth the surfaces as cast finish. It dies good getting into nooks and crannies.

    I have wire brushed them clean with a small cup brush and dremil tool. this works is harder to get into nooks and crannies, also takes longer. The wire brushes over time will smooth the as cast surfaces some also. The wire brushes wear and you may want an assortment for working the ladle. The flex shaft types work better for me.

    The last way I have done is to heat and tap all out I can let cool and unscrew handle. drop the ladle in your case cleaner with corncobs over night. You can use the oldest dirtiest media you have and throw it way after.... This will clean the ladle and with some additives in the old media polish the ladle more slowly. While time wise this is the longest process it is done unattended. What might really work would be a small rock tumbler and ceramic media and soap water. This would polish and smooth the tight crevices and surfaces better. The ceramics are made for this polishing odd shaped and internal areas.

  7. #7
    Boolit Master


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    I unscrewed the handle, and dropped the head in a vibratory cleaner filled with clean sand.

    It lightly smooths over time, and cleans fairly well.

  8. #8
    Boolit Grand Master Bazoo's Avatar
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    Thanks for the responses and ideas.

  9. #9
    Boolit Mold
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    I bring mine to my place of employment once in a while and blast them smooth in the sandblaster with aggressive grit. It makes the metal baby butt smooth again. Then I go get 'em dirty all over again.

  10. #10
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    I have a piece of course steel wool, like a chore boy pot scrubber. I hit ladle briefly from time to time to get rust and any scale off. I guess I figure it will take a long long time to rust a significant amount and I'm darn sure I don't need it to be clean enough to eat with.

    Of course the larger ingot casting ladles are much easier to get into than my Lyman little dipper ladle for casting bullets but I find I can stuff a chunk of that course steel wool into the bowl and twist it around a few times and that will take care of most of the grunge. Then I use it, and it gets grungy again. I might look into the mold release mentioned or alox (or 45/45/10 lube) just because. Even though really I'm not all that concerned with ladle having a bit of rust or not.
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  11. #11
    Boolit Master


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    I use Crisco Vegetable oil to protect my cast iron casting stuff. It doesn't evaporate and washes off with Hot Water and Dawn.
    I also use it to protect my electric casting furnaces.

    I scrub my ladles with a steel brush while they are still hot. The crud falls right off.
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  12. #12
    Boolit Grand Master Bazoo's Avatar
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    Lots of times it's a few months between casting sessions and my ladle rusts up. I'm lazy I spose, I should store it better instead of leaving it on the bench to rust. I have left it in the pot before, but for some reason don't care for doing that. Not that it makes any difference.

  13. #13
    Boolit Grand Master

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    While the ladle is still hot from casting touch your piece of beeswax, paraffin, or candle to it and watch it spread and coat the ladle in a protective coating. Inside and out. Only takes a second to do and it will add to fluxing next session

  14. #14
    Boolit Master
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    Quote Originally Posted by country gent View Post
    While the ladle is still hot from casting touch your piece of beeswax, paraffin, or candle to it and watch it spread and coat the ladle in a protective coating. Inside and out. Only takes a second to do and it will add to fluxing next session
    Great idea.

  15. #15
    Boolit Grand Master Bazoo's Avatar
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    Thanks country gent. And thanks everyone for the ideas.

  16. #16
    Boolit Master
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    wire brush and steel wool to clean rust from steel. if you have bees wax coat it when done casting its protected till next casting session

  17. #17
    Boolit Grand Master

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    That Midway Drop Out Mould Release which is pretty nasty stuff when used on your moulds works great on Ladles and steel muffin tin ingot moulds .
    When stuff starts sticking to ladle ... give it a coat , protects from rusting to boot .
    Gary
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  18. #18
    Boolit Grand Master GhostHawk's Avatar
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    I used to put my ladle on the steel brush side of my bench grinder once a year to clean it up.

    Then I discovered that Lee Alox dries to an enamel like finish that lead does not like to stick to.

    A couple of coats of thinned alox, get it good at warm on top of the pot to "cure it" and Tada! clean ladle.

    Repeat coat maybe once a year. A piece of 0000 steel wool rolled into a ball, clean it well, then put a few drops of alox on the steel wool and coat the outside. Let dry for half hour and repeat. Just make sure it gets nice and warm, bakes to that hard alox finish before inserting into the melt.

    For me it works, YMMV.

    PS works on sprue plates too!
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  19. #19
    Boolit Grand Master In Remembrance
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    Hawk, great trick, Thanks
    Regards
    John

  20. #20
    Boolit Buddy
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    Spraying the ladle with Pam cooking spray after its cool enough to handle will prevent rust and burns off quickly in molten lead. When I lived in a humid climate, I sprayed the top and insides of my lead pots to prevent them from rusting.

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