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Thread: Separating Antimony out of the liquid lead - Who to do?

  1. #1
    Boolit Mold
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    Separating Antimony out of the liquid lead - Who to do?

    Hello together,

    I have one question to you:
    My lead has a hardness of over 28 BNH with pencil test.
    I have molten my Monotypes and sometimes there was a silver foam (Google translator tells me „foam/froth“ for my German word „Schaum“) on top of the liquid.
    When I took this of and separated it my lead was going much softer to 22 BNH.

    But I don’t know how to do this controlled.
    What I have to do to make my antimony swimming as a foam on the top of my cooking pot?
    Other way, what I did wrong that the foam wasn’t staying in the melted lead and separated from the rest?

    Thank you, and sorry for my poor English.

  2. #2
    Boolit Grand Master fredj338's Avatar
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    Better to trade it for soft lead. If you lived in the states, happily trade you 100#.
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  3. #3
    Boolit Master
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    I agree. The easiest thing is to get pure lead, and mix your hard alloy with pure lead to get the hardness you want.

    The hotter your pot temperature, the faster you'll notice the stuff on the top (it's called "dross," I think it is similar to "schlacke").

    Antimony does not dissolve (auflösen?) in lead. Tin also does not dissolve in lead. Both will float to the top of your melt, and you have to stir and flux to keep them combined.

    However, antimony and tin in equal parts dissolve with each other, and form a solution: SnSb. That solution will dissolve in lead, but only as a small percentage of the mix. Maybe up to 5% SnSb to Pb.

    So if you have a lot of antimony in your lead, mixing pure lead until you only have 2-3% antimony, and adding 2-3% tin should make a more stable solution, with a lower BHN.

    But the easiest thing would be to just add pure lead until you reach the hardness you want.

    Hope that helps.



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  4. #4
    Boolit Master


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    "Antimony does not dissolve (auflösen?) in lead. Tin also does not dissolve in lead. Both will float to the top of your melt, and you have to stir and flux to keep them combined.": Ryanmattes

    Wasn't this contradicted in a recent thread? I believe both Lyman and LASC were referenced stating the opposite.

    Usually the quest is to get a harder alloy. If you can find pure lead, diluting your alloy, or using a fraction of it with pure lead would be an easier way to get where you want to go.
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  5. #5
    Boolit Master
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    When you melt monotype, or any lead, contaminants of all sorts float to the top. This is normal. You can stir the mix with a very dry wood paint stirring stick and add a little beeswax to help the contaminants float and the metals stay in the alloy.

    I save what I collect from the top of the melt in a metal bowl. When I have a bunch I add it to a big pot and recover most of the metal.

    I do not believe that you are removing significant antimony. I think that your monotype has hardened with age and that melting and casting restarts the aging process.

    Can you obtain softer lead?
    What hardness do you want?

  6. #6
    Boolit Master
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    "Antimony does not dissolve (auflösen?) in lead. Tin also does not dissolve in lead. Both will float to the top of your melt, and you have to stir and flux to keep them combined."

    This statement is not correct. Tin combines with lead. Tin combines with antimony. The three will combine into one alloy. Even if allowed to form oxide, the ratios will remain essentially the same. You may notice a foamy layer forming on the surface of your monotype as it is melted. That is due to the high amount of antimony in the alloy. Increase the temperature and flux and reduce and it will all go back into solution. Any dross removed will have some of the alloy in the trash, and adding that to the next melting of scrap metal is a good idea.

    If the alloy you presently have is too hard and not suited for your needs, dilute the harder alloy with soft lead. Trying to remove one of the elements from the alloy, is not practical for the home caster.

  7. #7
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    What Dusty said ^^^^^^^
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  8. #8
    Boolit Grand Master popper's Avatar
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    Solubility of Sb in Pb is 4% @ 252C and 0% @ 2C. No, you can't 'cook' it out. Add low Sb lead.
    Whatever!

  9. #9
    Boolit Master
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    What our OP is seeing is alloy "Floating out." Often, this is an indicator of the temperature being too low. The first thing that comes out is tin, then antimony. They come out as rich lead alloys - not pure metal.

    If he wants to keep it in - run the pot a bit hotter, add some flux, and stir less...

    If he wants to soften the lead, well, just keep drossing it real good and stir the heck out of it.

  10. #10
    Boolit Master 243winxb's Avatar
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    To remove antimony, VERY SLOWLY bring up temperature till alloy just become liquid. What appears to be oatmeal floating on top is Antimony & Copper. Skim it off & then flux and test hardness again.

  11. #11
    Boolit Master
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    Quote Originally Posted by truckjohn View Post
    What our OP is seeing is alloy "Floating out." Often, this is an indicator of the temperature being too low. The first thing that comes out is tin, then antimony. They come out as rich lead alloys - not pure metal.

    If he wants to keep it in - run the pot a bit hotter, add some flux, and stir less...

    If he wants to soften the lead, well, just keep drossing it real good and stir the heck out of it.
    Quote Originally Posted by 243winxb View Post
    To remove antimony, VERY SLOWLY bring up temperature till alloy just become liquid. What appears to be oatmeal floating on top is Antimony & Copper. Skim it off & then flux and test hardness again.
    In both of these cases the content of the liquid alloy and the semi-liquid alloy are essentially the same. The effect seems to be caused by the alloy down in the melt being slightly hotter than the alloy at the surface. Don’t take my word for it, skim some off and then have it and a sample from the melt compared. I did this, and I’ll tell you that the alloy is the alloy, there is no separating it in our backyards.

  12. #12
    Boolit Master 243winxb's Avatar
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    Never, ever add anything to the lead pot, other then an approved flux.

    Refining process for removing antimony from lead bullion. https://patents.google.com/patent/US4425160A/en

    adding caustic soda and metallic sodium to form an antimony-rich skimmable refining dross comprising a sodium-antimony intermetallic and separating the dross from the refined bullion. Along with antimony, other elements, such as arsenic, cadmium, copper, nickel, silver, sulfur, selenium, tellurium and zinc, if present in the bullion, are also removed in the dross by the sodium


    Never, ever add anything to the lead pot, other then an approved flux.
    Last edited by 243winxb; 03-24-2022 at 08:47 AM. Reason: Never, ever add anything to the lead pot, other then an approved flux.

  13. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by 243winxb View Post
    Refining process for removing antimony from lead bullion. https://patents.google.com/patent/US4425160A/en



    That process is well beyond the means of the average home caster to accomplish.

    Caustic soda is commonly called Lye. Lye is very mild compared to metallic sodium http://www.kplintl.com/blog/sodium-m...y-precautions/
    Last edited by M-Tecs; 03-23-2022 at 09:25 PM.
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  14. #14
    Boolit Master
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    Quote Originally Posted by 243winxb View Post
    To remove antimony, VERY SLOWLY bring up temperature till alloy just become liquid. What appears to be oatmeal floating on top is Antimony & Copper. Skim it off & then flux and test hardness again.
    This is how you remove zinc, not antimony!

    There is some real bad info circulating in this thread!!!!!! Very unusual for this forum.

  15. #15
    Boolit Master
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    Quote Originally Posted by 243winxb View Post
    Refining process for removing antimony from lead bullion. https://patents.google.com/patent/US4425160A/en



    And it is nowhere near as simple as your method in post #10 would suggest. Not something that should be tried without knowledge of chemistry and reactions.

  16. #16
    Boolit Mold Kavein's Avatar
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    To keep your mix in solution try topping your pot with burnt wood shavings. Oxygen will mess with your mix. If you want to reduce hardness just add pure lead. I guess the question is what is your target?

  17. #17
    Boolit Master
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    Quote Originally Posted by 243winxb View Post
    Refining process for removing antimony from lead bullion. https://patents.google.com/patent/US4425160A/en



    Sodium is very highly reactive, so no doubt this works, but working with metallic sodium is very dangerous for exactly the same reason.

    I doubt that you were actually suggesting that anyone try this, but if you do please take video!

  18. #18
    Boolit Master 243winxb's Avatar
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    https://castboolits.gunloads.com/sho...h-Caustic-Soda Harris process?

    The simple method to reduce the % of antimony is, add pure lead to the pot. As said above.

    Never, ever add anything to the lead pot, other then an approved flux.

  19. #19
    Boolit Master
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    Other way, what I did wrong that the foam wasn’t staying in the melted lead and separated from the rest?
    Unless I miss your meaning, you are inquiring why your antimony is coming out of solution (separating from the alloy). If my understanding is correct, your alloy is tin-poor. If you add tin (Sn), your antimony will go back into solution. My linotype would do this when I was melting type metal I bought from the scrap yard. Then I realized the printing houses were selling it for scrap because it wouldn't easily cast into type anymore. Tin oxidizes into tin oxide quickly and the antimony begins to come out of solution. The higher the percentage of antimony, the more tin is needed to keep it in solution.

    Not to worry about the English. Welcome to the website!
    Last edited by yeahbub; 03-24-2022 at 12:49 PM.

  20. #20
    Boolit Grand Master popper's Avatar
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    Solubility of Sb in Pb is 4% @ 485F. That is frozen alloy! Melt solubility is much higher (10-12%). You can't 'cook' it out no matter what you can normally do. It will (same for tin) glob up in VERY microscopic chunks. You can't skim it off!!
    Only thing you can do is add pure or a lower Sb alloy. Period. Yes it combines with tin but even SbSn doesn't skim off!
    Whatever!

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