Howdy folks,
I'm in need of 3-5 pounds of filtered Beeswax for my traditional BP lube.
Thanks
Willy
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Howdy folks,
I'm in need of 3-5 pounds of filtered Beeswax for my traditional BP lube.
Thanks
Willy
Last I saw it in a store was Hobby Lobby. Michaels used to carry it, don’t know if they still do.
On this site, Randy Rat sometimes has it available.
Sam Sackett
Put a WTB ad in S&S. Someone may be able to help you and it keeps you and anyone that may offer to sell you some within the rules.
PS: good job Willy you already did that I see.
Look on computer and or the phonebook.
Look under the titles Beekeeper or Honey in your area.
check your Facebook swap site or craigslist
Thanks guys.
I just used up what I had left yesterday and was able to make it while my wife was out so I escaped the backlash of making it on her stove and setting it in the freezer ;)
For use in a Star.
Attachment 322039
Surely NH has local bee keepers and honey producers. Google is your friend. Not the time of year for garden markets but the honey/ jelly sellers may be of help. Evil Bay, Amazon also.
Any of the soap making hobby supply web stores will have it. Last I checked it was $5 per pound. Local bee keeper / guy I used to work with wanted more -- it's a funny market.
I have purchased my beeswax in the past from folks here and I thought I'd give them a chance first. Most of the online sellers have crazy prices but I did find one who has reasonable prices and free shipping on 8 lbs so unless someone gets back to me by PM, I'll probably go that route.
Amazon has a few with reasonable prices but lots of reviews question whether it''s actually beeswax.... food coloring, fragrance added and weird melting properties are listed as complaints.
While I know that there are other waxes and materials that will make a good lube, I like to stick with the traditional beeswax/tallow that I make and use for BP Cowboy and other BP sports.
Several companies sell it on Amazon if ya can't find it anywhere else.
It may be more expensive, but you do get instant gratification.
Just put 'bees wax' in their on site search engine.
Forum member Randy Rat sold refined beeswax on the site ... At one time but I don't know if he is still in the bee business ... mioght have "retired" .
I have a local Louisiana fellow who supplies me with honey and wax .
Fresh honey and no shipping charges , he lives just down the street from me ... I found him through The Louisiana Beekeeper's Association (state) and the local , Capital Area Beekeeper's Association (Baton Rouge) ... these groups can get you in touch with the beekeeper's .
Check your "yellow Pages" or whatever the telephone directory is called nowday's and you might find someone close , not paying shipping saves a little time and money .
Gary
If you buy a 10 lb bag of flake beeswax on Amazon, you pay $3.5/lb. A 3lb bag goes for about $4.6. No sense in paying $5/lb from a beekeeper, just to have to go and render it into clean wax.
I had trouble finding bees wax to use and a person I know suggested using a toilet bowl wax ring? Works for me .......???????
Buying filtered beeswax is not necessary if you get cheese cloth, double it and pour melted beeswax through the cheese cloth to remove crud. Same way to clean old or dirty beeswax. So in a pinch you can buy old or dirty bees wax and just met then filter clean it. In case you run up against a wall in your search.
I've read somewhere that you can take dirty beeswax, put it in an old clean tee shirt, put it in a pan, heat it until the wax is melted, then pull the tee shirt out. All the crud will be in it, then discard the tee shirt
My experience in obtaining clean beeswax was many years ago. I bought some of the stuff the bee keeper called caps, which was rather nasty and had dirt and bee body parts as cut from the top of the comb to prepare for honey removal. I melted the wax in a pan with water to remove the excess honey and let it cool.
The result was a disc of clean wax with what generally looked like coffee grounds stuck to the bottom of the disc. Heavier material sunk in the water, and the honey was diluted in the water. I scraped the majority of the debris from the bottom of the disc of wax and then melted the wax a second time. This was poured through a circular filter covered with cheese cloth, but a T shirt would work as well, into plastic containers to act as molds. I had wiped the inside of the molds with a spray cooking product like Pam or some such so the cakes of wax would release easier. Change your filter as desired to keep a clean product. Chill in the fridge and when hard, flex the mold to pop the cake of wax and it will release from the mold. Repeat as needed.
Wax is best described as a dirt magnet, so I wrapped each piece in clear wrap and placed it in a zip lock bag. It is still good and has that honey aroma after many years in storage. It was a learning experience, and the big lesson to me was you will not get nearly as much wax from the raw product this way so be careful when purchasing "caps" or your cost per pound will be about doubled when done.
That’s called rendering. It’s the same process as getting tallow from fat. You can add salt water to further purify the wax. Impurities stick to the salt. The salt is soluble in water but not wax & fat, so the wax & fat stay clean.
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Rendering two or three times will help further purify the wax/fat. What I used to do was boil in plain water first, then add salt to the water for the second pass, then boil a third time with just water.
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Rendering is a lot of work. I was curious, but now I just buy tallow & beeswax from Amazon.
i dont know if you can get that much for a good price but i just use amazon for the most part or my local small honey guy they always have beeswax, and everywhere has a local honey guy that makes natural bee products.
i would sweat by amazon and such though if you struggling to find local. will get you enough to get buy at the least
Guys, if you use a t-shirt or cheesecloth to filter beeswax don't discard it unless you never light a real fire. Cut in chunks that's a great firestarter!
Certainly does make a good fire starter, but make sure it dries out well since it will still have some moisture from prior processing. Not a bad idea to sprinkle a little saw dust on the warm wax as it cools and before cutting. Thank you Wayne, good to point that out.
Mix the bees wax & saw dust with beef tallow or bacon grease for a real fire starter! I actually have a block of that for flux at my casting bench.
Back when I was still Lubing, I had bought a lot from Randy Rat. I contacted him several years ago (probaly 5-6) and he was no longer selling it. You can try him, but I doubt he is still doing it.
Honestly, Amazon is going to be about as cheap as anywhere. At least in my experience. Seems like most beekeepers are selling for more than I can buy it on Amazon for. Although I don't use it anymore, it still seems cheaper and more reliable to me to just buy it there.
Maybe find somebody selling local honey and work back from there.
Price it out and offer it in the S&S. There is usually a market for clean bees wax.
Today they are "Slack Wax" which is mostly petroleum. Cheaper and actually better for their intended purpose. And perfectly OK provided your powder does not contain Sulfur. If it does, the bore of your gun will slowly get coated in Tar. A muzzle loader will be impossible to load after about a dozen shots (happened to me) and the slowly decreasing bore size can result in a cartridge gun getting into dangerously high pressures. You will know thats happening because the accuracy is just gone.