- Joined
- Aug 22, 2012
- Messages
- 4,260
download this and have a good read
I have ideas in that direction too. That is my plan B if this doesn't work out. It's not plan A because driving around looking for waste oil doesn't seem fun. I have electricity on tap.Check out the crucible furnaces that burn waste oil. They will heat up enough to melt cast iron at a lower cost. The heat is hard on the crucible and the furnace lining.
Good point. I need to check the duty cycle rating on my welder before going any further.Be careful of not exceeding the duty cycle of your welder. When welding you weld for a few minutes at a time. In a furnace it is continuous. Most welders won’t take a continuous load at the higher amperage.
Why did you not pursue it? What did you find that dissuaded you?I once considered an old hobby design for electric arc furnace construction using
carbon rods and... an electric flatiron to limit current straight from the wall outlet.
Construction details involved a flowerpot and 'water glass' for mixing high temperature
mortar. Graphite rods with a 'buzz box' welding set would be a lot safer.
graphite rods for sale here
Thanks, I have never come across a dowloadable copy of that. I had planned to buy it along with the gingery books before they (whatever that place that sold them, can't remember) went out of business. I have seen these or similar in action and the result is impressive. If this casting thing grows beyond melting a few pounds and into "let's cast a whole lathe" then this will be the direction I will go. But for now it's a bit involved.
Ya got to love how this guy is looking into the crucible without any eye protection.
Thank you for this. What a fantastic read!
That was my point. Without gas it was guaranteed to overheat. Calling it "air-cooled" is a misnomer, it's argon cooled.Yeah but I think it is designed with the assumption that shielding gas will be cooling it and I ran it without shielding gas.
Sometimes it takes something like burning up a torch to realize something so obvious. Or at least it does in my case.That was my point. Without gas it was guaranteed to overheat. Calling it "air-cooled" is a misnomer, it's argon cooled.