Back to the foundry
Back to the foundry
The clay model has been ready for four years, so my first step is to make a rubber mold of the clay model.
I shall use shims cut from cut up coffee cans. After cutting the cans into strips, I need to make keys in the strips for alignment purposes. (Rather than go to length to explain in words what I mean, for those of you who are sand casters, I shall let the series of photographs that will follow over the next few days do the explaining.)
I have been away from the foundry for too long.
Richard
Re: Back to the foundry
Looks good richard, it looks like quite a large model. Will you just be casting it in pieces and welding it together or just casting it all as one piece?
Re: Back to the foundry
Very nice, I really like the sax too. How tall is she?
quando omni flunkus moritati
Re: Back to the foundry
The sax is six feet tall. The girl is not large. She is about 16 inches tall. I'm too old to be casting large pieces now. A #30 crucible full of molten bronze has to be given some respect .
Richard
Richard
Re: Back to the foundry
Nice Richard, will be looking forward to following the progress on this.
I'd rather laugh with the sinners than cry with the saints the sinners are much more fun...
Muller
Muller
Re: Back to the foundry
A #30 crucible is close to 90 pounds of bronze,
R
R
Re: Back to the foundry
Oh, I use the ones from Legend Mining supplies. Their number corresponds to Kilos of copper. I have a couple #20 that is supposed to be 20 Kilos (44 pounds) of copper. I don't know why different companies have different scales. A lot use pounds of pounds of Aluminum. Which is about a third of copper.
quando omni flunkus moritati
Re: Back to the foundry
I think the crucible richard has is an A30, not a #30, which would result in 90lbs of bronze. salamander super crucibles usually are the ones that go by A prefix because the size is denoted by the amount of aluminum in lbs where as import or cheaper crucibles usually go by # prefix and is based off of weight in brass. I have an A10 crucible and it gives around 30lbs of cast iron, so I think the A30 is what he's talking about, not the #30. I think that's where everyone is mixed up at.
Re: Back to the foundry
I have spent the past three days in getting my foundry back into condition. Cleaning out the accumulated leaves and dirt, Replacing fuel hoses and the rope that hoists the oil tank to gravity feed level. Buying a fresh bag of plaster for the investment. (I always use fresh plaster.) Making the sheet-metal flask for investing the wax. (Shown below.) And ten or twenty other things.
We have a big art exhibition here on February 10 and 11, and it is staring me in the face.
I plan to make the polyurethane rubber mold of the clay figure tomorrow, make the plaster mother mold on Monday, make the wax on Monday or Tuesday, invest it on Wednesday, burn the investment out for five days in the kiln at between 900 and 1000 F, and then pour it.
The flask is sitting on the kiln base with the kiln body over it suspended from the gantry crane.
Richard
We have a big art exhibition here on February 10 and 11, and it is staring me in the face.
I plan to make the polyurethane rubber mold of the clay figure tomorrow, make the plaster mother mold on Monday, make the wax on Monday or Tuesday, invest it on Wednesday, burn the investment out for five days in the kiln at between 900 and 1000 F, and then pour it.
The flask is sitting on the kiln base with the kiln body over it suspended from the gantry crane.
Richard