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tacofrank
08-21-2021, 09:27 PM
I've decided to quit waiting for my molds to heat up and get a "Hot Plate". With exposed coils or a platter/plate type?
Advise is really welcomed.

Thanks for looking,
TacoFrank

Wheelguns 1961
08-21-2021, 09:46 PM
Don’t get the cheapest one they have. The cheap ones don’t last and they don’t have enough power. Use an old circular saw blade on top for even heat. A brass mold takes more heat to warm up than an aluminum mold.

Hossfly
08-21-2021, 09:52 PM
I use hot plate with exposed coils, with a old piece of aluminum flat plate directly on top of the coil to distribute the heat. Old saw blade would work also. Must watch if heating ingots they can reach temp to melt. Just get up to about 400’ cast boolits as soon as pot gets to 750’

Minerat
08-21-2021, 10:19 PM
Mine is a coil type and it was about $10 at wallyworld. I use an old circular saw blade on the coils and a large tomato paste (industrial size) can (as a mould oven).

FLINTNFIRE
08-22-2021, 01:29 AM
Mine are platter/ plate style no old saw blade needed , it was also from walmart , not very expensive and been in use for some years now and it gets hotter then you need low end of medium setting works , above that is getting to hot .

tacofrank
08-22-2021, 11:00 AM
Thank you all very much for your help. This forum is awesome!
Thanks Again,
TacoFrank

Herb in Pa
08-22-2021, 11:17 AM
Check on ebay, they always have a supply of used lab grade hot plates, mine has a ceramic top and a very good temperature control..........

metricmonkeywrench
08-22-2021, 11:41 AM
+1 on the cheap Wally World one, couldn’t find anything worth while at the recycle shops or yard sales. We had done a bunch of tile work we had some worn out blades that work real well, though they are a bit thinner than a circular saw blade

jonp
08-22-2021, 12:31 PM
Cheap wally world coil type. I picked up an old flat cast iron thing for pancakes or something all rusted at a yard sale for $1. Cleaned it up and use that

slim1836
08-22-2021, 05:32 PM
I too have a cheap one from Wally World and it has worked well for years, however, I still look for the old coil style hotplate at yard sales just in case. I love having 2 P.I.D.'s, wish I had a couple more.

Slim

hc18flyer
08-22-2021, 09:07 PM
I picked up a small electric skillet and notched the cover to let the handles stick out. It was 3.00 at Goodwill, works fine. hc18flyer

lightman
08-22-2021, 09:21 PM
I use an open coil type from Walmart that was about $10-12. I scrounged a piece of 1/8" plate to set on it. If you use it to preheat ingots after you start casting be aware that it can melt them.

wv109323
08-22-2021, 09:28 PM
I have the cheap one from Wal-mart. The wires going to coil have burnt or come loose several times. Easy fix but kinda bad during a casting session.

358429
08-22-2021, 09:52 PM
My hot plate is the Open Flame from a turkey fryer[emoji3]

Sent from my SM-G930T using Tapatalk

tacofrank
08-22-2021, 10:11 PM
Thanks again guys
Heading to Wally World in the am. Have several saw blades I should have pitched a long time ago. Lol!
Sincere Thanks,
TF

OS OK
08-22-2021, 11:47 PM
I wish I had discovered the hot plate pre-warmer many moons ago...

https://i.imgur.com/EL0314y.jpg

One nice feature is that you can set a mould back in, go take a break from casting and come back and never skip a beat...good casts from the get-go.

Shopdog
08-23-2021, 07:07 AM
Yup(above OS OK),go whole hog and fab up an oven. Looking close at mine in pic;

Made a sliding door so it can accommodate 1 or 2 moulds. So nice as mentioned to be able to "park" a mould in and take a short break. Also,if you have a mould running hot,you can alternate using another whilst the hot one settles down a bit. Point being,you're getting lots of options with an oven.

ChuckO
08-23-2021, 08:29 AM
Another benefit to using an oven made from a #10 can is the ability to put ingots on top of it. They can then preheat a little to drive moisture away and reduce the time for the melt pot to return to heat.

JMax
08-23-2021, 11:19 AM
I cast with one mold at a time, my WW hot plate has covered coils but to improve control I got a charcoal grill thermometer, got an aluminum block, drilled a proper sized hole and mounted the thermometer. I like to preheat my mold to 450 degrees and start casting raining bullets.

John Guedry
08-23-2021, 12:11 PM
I use an open coil model given to me by a friend. It was at least20 yrs old when I got it, but I think was unused. Works fine.

kevin c
08-23-2021, 12:33 PM
I use an 1100 watt single coil that I got at Ace Hardware ("Broil-King" I think).

Every saw blade I tried has warped so that heat transfer to the mold was slowed. There's also the fact that I can be clumsy and once scratched the block of one mold on the teeth (just cosmetic, but still). I'm now experimenting with thick strips of aluminum and a mold "garage" made from an old bread pan.

jsizemore
08-23-2021, 12:53 PM
$5 open coil I found at the flea market. I fix appliances for a living. I set my mold directly on the coil at the medium setting. I stick the probe of a digital meat thermometer through the sprue hole against the bottom of one of the mold cavities. I set the alarm for 400 but will start casting when it hits 375 if everything else is ready. I do the same with aluminum, brass or iron molds.

kevin c
08-24-2021, 01:02 AM
Jsizemore: I've read claims here that putting an (aluminum) mold directly on the coils can warp the blocks. Have you had that problem? Do you see the coils turn red at the setting you use? I can't get my molds up to casting temp (~400°) unless the coil is definitely a dull red color.

Walks
08-24-2021, 01:55 AM
I've a 1100 hot plate I found when My Mom passed. And a cast iron heat diffuser plate too.
It does get hot enough to melt ingots if turned up too high. And yeah, it's coils will glow red if turned all the way up. My little HF therm gun reads 550degrees for that.

jsizemore
08-26-2021, 02:00 AM
Jsizemore: I've read claims here that putting an (aluminum) mold directly on the coils can warp the blocks. Have you had that problem? Do you see the coils turn red at the setting you use? I can't get my molds up to casting temp (~400°) unless the coil is definitely a dull red color.

NEI,Noe and Accurate 3,4 and 5 cavity aluminum molds. Digital meat thermometer probe placed through the sprue plate hole set on the nose portion of the cavity. I see the coil get a red glow and then cycles off. My setting is just below "M" on the scale. I don't blast anything with wide open heat. I'm not trying to race. 375-400degF takes about 10-12 minutes. Big 8-10 cavity iron mold takes 15. Real easy to set the alarm on the digital meat thermometer. No warp, no melted mold, no loose alignment pins. We pour 700-800degF lead in the cavity and the mold doesn't warp or melt. A much thinner aluminum pan sits on a burner coil or flame at very high heat. I don't walk away and leave a mold unattended on a burner or a pot of liquid lead. Do whatever you think is right. I don't use Lee molds so can't say how they handle the heat

bluebird66
08-31-2021, 12:55 PM
Thanks for the photos everyone!

OS OK
08-31-2021, 01:55 PM
For a long time I used to use a small block of wood to hold the handles at the correct height to keep the mould flat on the heating plate & to keep the mould from falling off the plate. That made it rough to preheat 2 moulds, I was always knocking one mould off when grabbing the other one...

https://i.imgur.com/88am7DW.jpg?1

Then one fine day I found one of my feed buckets that had been broken (plastic junk-O-bucket) and just as I started to toss it...I saw a solution to my preheating problems...a rail made from a bail ...to support the mould handles...

https://i.imgur.com/mGU45pP.jpg

Retumbo
08-31-2021, 04:01 PM
I had a bunch of these lying around, work well

https://www.omega.ca/en/industrial-heaters/strip-heaters/ws-heater/p/WS-605-240V?gclid=Cj0KCQjwpreJBhDvARIsAF1_BU1ifBSLEGw9u8O XZ3P35UCOh-v4GSgq6Vxo2WPv6FG6DdmamiBcb2EaAu7WEALw_wcB&gclsrc=aw.ds

kevin c
09-01-2021, 05:59 AM
Ouch, I'm not sure I'd be willing to spend that much. Glad you had them already.

Rich/WIS
09-02-2021, 10:34 AM
Instead of the #10 can I use the bottom of a Danish Butter cookie tin, notched for the mold handle. Used a wire coat hanger to fashion a bail handle to make it easier to remove and use the top of tin inverted on the hotplate to put ingots in to pre-heat. My hotplate is the solid type from WW. Don't have a tippng problem with the molds as they are all either Lee six cavity or NOE five cavity. The cookie tin is shorter and keeps the heat around the mold better than a tall can.

tacofrank
09-08-2021, 12:33 AM
Howdy Casters,
I took the advice from several folks here a few weeks ago and bought a cheap hot plate from a thrift store ($3.50). All can say is do it. Damn! I've been casting for 50 years and casting dozens of bullet before getting good ones. I cast from three different molds this afternoon and got great bullets from the first pour with all three molds.
This site is awesome!!
TF

kevin c
09-08-2021, 04:38 AM
Well, I just tried out the aluminum strips on my 1100 watt coil, with the bread pan mold garage. The garage I went a little crazy on: it's two bread pans nested, sandwiching a layer of pink Fiberglas insulation, with one end cut off for mold insertion.

TOO HOT!!! A few minutes between medium and high (I used to use the maximum setting before) had the mold smoking when I rubbed a two stroke oil soaked swab over the sprue plate, and the first pour of 720° alloy (PID controlled pot) the sprue would not solidify at all; it just ran off the top of the plate and left little puddles in each sprue hole. The blocks and plate were so hot that even after a minute and a half the lead in the sprue channels was liquid, and when I relaxed my grip on the handles I discovered the lead in the cavities was the same as it drained from the cavities out between the mold faces.

Starting with another mold cold, even medium heat settings caused smoking and little frosted BB's. This is going to need more work...

OS OK
09-08-2021, 10:05 AM
Well, I just tried out the aluminum strips on my 1100 watt coil, with the bread pan mold garage. The garage I went a little crazy on: it's two bread pans nested, sandwiching a layer of pink Fiberglas insulation, with one end cut off for mold insertion.

TOO HOT!!! A few minutes between medium and high (I used to use the maximum setting before) had the mold smoking when I rubbed a two stroke oil soaked swab over the sprue plate, and the first pour of 720° alloy (PID controlled pot) the sprue would not solidify at all; it just ran off the top of the plate and left little puddles in each sprue hole. The blocks and plate were so hot that even after a minute and a half the lead in the sprue channels was liquid, and when I relaxed my grip on the handles I discovered the lead in the cavities was the same as it drained from the cavities out between the mold faces.

Starting with another mold cold, even medium heat settings caused smoking and little frosted BB's. This is going to need more work...

Can you put the thermocouple from the PID in the garage to see how hot it got?
If you had been warming ingots on the top of the enclosure, that might not have gone too well?

kevin c
09-08-2021, 11:47 AM
Good thinking, there, OS OK. Thinking out loud:

The rigid PID probe is too long to sit in a cavity and go through the opening. I could drill a hole through the top; it's not like heat loss is going to be an issue. Or, easier, I could use a flexible wire thermocouple hooked up to my multimeter.

I just need to find the setting that'll get the blocks to 400° and keep them there until casting time, right? I'll report back.

bangerjim
09-08-2021, 11:54 AM
Howdy Casters,
I took the advice from several folks here a few weeks ago and bought a cheap hot plate from a thrift store ($3.50). All can say is do it. Damn! I've been casting for 50 years and casting dozens of bullet before getting good ones. I cast from three different molds this afternoon and got great bullets from the first pour with all three molds.
This site is awesome!!
TF

Hear us now and believer us later! It does work and saves hours of throwing back bad castings while getting up and running.

banger

DaveN
10-15-2021, 03:12 PM
I suggest getting an infrared thermometer. Not expensive, I think I paid $25 or so.

kevin c
10-16-2021, 03:10 AM
Update on temp measurement and my insulated mold garage.

I now use a k type thermocouple in one of the cavities, figuring the temp of the mold block at the cavity surface is really what I want to know, not so much the air temperature in the garage or the top of the sprue plate. I'm finding that for my 8 cav aluminum molds, a cavity reading of 428 to 446 °F (220 to 230 °C) drops good boolits with a light matte frost (95-3-2 alloy), though ambient temp and wind affect that.

With the probe I just leave the coil hot plate set at max, and pull the mold off when the probe approaches the temp I want. That does mean monitoring the temp, though. I've also learned to preheat the preheater if I want to get to casting faster: it takes a while for the garage and the heat diffusing aluminum strips under it to warm up, even at max, and that slows warming up the mold.

243winxb
10-16-2021, 03:56 PM
Heat molds by casting. https://support.leeprecision.net/en/knowledgebase/article/alignment-pins-fall-out-overheating-double-cavity-mold
The aluminum molds will not overheat by simply casting but can be overheated by preheating with a hot plate, torch, setting on top of the pot to heat up or immersing in molten alloy for an excessive amount of time.

https://flic.kr/p/2myVqhb

Mike W1
10-21-2021, 05:19 PM
I'm one that goes the easy route I guess. If it gets electrical heat applied I use a PID and control things. Experimenting with my moulds for the temperature they cast well at as well if the hot plate will maintain it there when I set it there for a break without overheating I came up with what works well for me. Both pots also have PID's as well as my lube/sizer. PID's take all that guesswork and I like turning things on and KNOW they'll be just where I want them to be. A litttle ebay shopping makes having multiple units pretty inexpensive. Be sides being fun to assemble!

Here's how my hotplate setup is. Used a 1/4" aluminum piece for that.
290636