Armored man: seems like it would be easier and cheaper for you to buy some smaller ingots off e-bay.
Armored man: seems like it would be easier and cheaper for you to buy some smaller ingots off e-bay.
I am luck enough to have a big band saw and I have a nice blade on it for non-ferrous metals. I love the thing. You can find some good deals for what you need on E-Bay so you really do not have to pay that much for your alloys. BUT be prepared for me to drive up the price.![]()
Dave
If you can get it to stand up in the pot so it isn't going to fall out with some melted lead in the bottom of pot, and the pot on the stove over heat, you can use a torch to melt it and make it slide down into the melt.
I guess you have to get it down to a manageable size first though. A large welding tip or cutting tip will melt a channel through a big piece. Yup, there's a lot of lead that comes out of the cut, so do this where the lead can collect and you don't lose it, or cause other problems.
You cannot discover new oceans unless you have the courage to lose sight of the shore
another way would be to buy the ingot, buy a case of good beer, and find a fellow member here that is in your area and ahs a way to make ingots.
It will do two things, 1) get your ingots into a size you can use, 2) get a couple of cast booliteers together. If I were closer I would help you out, it is a fair distance in my case.
Another option is to build something out of scrap and use charcoal to melt the lead and make ingots. Look at the thrift shops, salvation army, etc for a pot and build you a fire pit in that forest of a backyard you have (just jesting ont hat one). You can even make ingots by cutting pop/beer cans in half/quarter and using an old soup ladle to fill up once melted. Since we all know you are crazy anyway, the above acts of getting lead formlarge to ever smaller pieces will only surprise the unkowing.
Also did you ever come up with another mould for the 38? If you have a set of handles that will work on a lyman 2 cav mould, I have a 2 cav WC that I might pass on ( I don't have the mouldnumber at hand number).
No casters nearby I know of.I have only the 10 pound pot, and again thanks very much to the individual responsable!
I do appreciate it!
I do have that single burner propane stove, but it sits on top of the bottle -I can see that puppy overturning in a second.
How about an old hibachi+cast iron dutch oven? I can hit the dollar stores/pawnshops later this week and look. Charcoal get hot enough?
If you use a band saw for lead cutting add a chip brush. Thiis is a small clamp on rotating brush the sweeps the chips from the teeth of the saw. I made mine with a small drill mounted wire brush and some scrap.
I've cut up 2 long rectangular chunks (170 #'s and 190#s) that were about 3 inches thick and 5-6 inches wide by two feet or so, and a 5-600 lb sailboat ballast chunk, with a circular saw with a carbide tipped flooring blade. Cut them into 50-60 lb chunks that I could get into my smelter. It only has 10-12 teeth on it so it's very coarse; went through good. If you put a large box in front of the cut direction you can control the chips pretty good also.
McLintock
Be careful when cutting lead with a torch as I believe that you vaporize some of the lead which can then be inhaled. I read somewhere that the folks that cut up lead sheets for a living got paid well but didn't live too long... I don't remember the source or the industry, but it was some type of salvage.
John
Don't know about lead but I used a torch to cutup and scrap a large qty of galvanized metal once. Guess I didn't have good enough ventilation cause I ended up diagnosed with chemical pneumonia and wheezed for about 3 months.
Steven
Standles,
Zinc fumes are possibly more toxic than lead fumes. I guess one should stand on the upwind side, or not do it. My experiences are that you don't produce any visible fumes with lead. It doesn't get that hot, just runs off. Zinc on the other hand on galvanized steel makes a lot of fumes probably because it does get very hot and evaporates as the steel is melted.
Yep! Zinc Galvanized steel is nasty stuff ! I burn ,weld and plasma cut and grind this stuff on basicly a daily basis. ventilation is a MUST!
If you find yourself in a fair fight, your tactics suck!
HIT IT WITH AN AXE .... then turn it over and with one end supported up hit it with a hammer and it will break. I've used this method to break the 35 pound castings of linotype and I used to use it to bust up cable sheathing from the telephone company. It worked before and I'd bet on it today.
Nighthunter
Easiest and fastest way to 'cut' lead - A Propane Torch
Regards
John
My silhouette shooting partner/spotter is a contractor, and he owns a jack hammer. Makes short work of the thickest lead.
Nighthunter has the right idea, only I use a splitting maul. Put the lead slab on the splitting block and hit it on both sides. You don't have a splitting maul? How do you split wood for the wood stove? Get a wood stove. When you have a good bed of coals, put the plumbers pot full of lead in among the coals and give it about 20 minutes, take it out and pour into a muffin tin. Total cost? Nothing. How do you accumulate all this stuff? Live till you're 70. Everything just appears out of nowhere.
I had the same problem with my 500lb blocks. I found that a demo hammer was the best choice. See this link http://castboolits.gunloads.com/showthread.php?t=16655
I bought a Bosh Bulldog from Home Depot and it works great. I have enough lead for the next 20 years![]()
JR
hydraulic...I have exactly 30 years to go before 70. I would like to get started sooner.![]()
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 |
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