Author Topic: Melting aluminuim cans  (Read 4651 times)

Offline ironman

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Melting aluminuim cans
« on: February 22, 2015, 08:08:29 PM »
Hi everyone

I have been experimenting melting aluminium cans to see how bad the melting loss is. The conclusion is I would only use it if I had nothing else.
 Have a look at the video 

     


« Last Edit: February 22, 2015, 09:09:35 PM by dsquire »

Offline vtsteam

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Re: Melting aluminuim cans
« Reply #1 on: February 22, 2015, 08:51:05 PM »
Intresting video, Ironman. I've never tried aluminum cans, and probably won't. Always assumed the result would be pretty much what you found. The machining and bending tests were good to see. And interesting that the can stock machined so well. Most YouTubers don't go into any detail about what they've got in the end -- seems like most are content casting aluminum muffins. Thanks for exploring one more corner of the casting world.  :clap: :clap: :beer:
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Offline backofanenvelope

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Re: Melting aluminuim cans
« Reply #2 on: February 23, 2015, 05:30:04 PM »
Thanks for the review Ironman was thinking this would be the case so I will no longer hunt the niebourhood for tin cans but look around for better sources.
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Offline hermetic

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Re: Melting aluminuim cans
« Reply #3 on: March 05, 2015, 06:20:45 AM »
Hi Ironman, two suggestions, not from experience, but from reading much about the properties of aluminium and its alloys. First, as you say, use a flux, and second, try it with a lidded crucible, lined with a refractive coating, rather than letting to molten aluminium be in direct contact with the steel. It only needs a thin wash coating. You are loosing metal to oxidisation, so you need to limit contact with the air as much as possible.
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Phil
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Offline hopefuldave

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Re: Melting aluminuim cans
« Reply #4 on: March 07, 2015, 08:23:32 PM »
Hi Ironman,

 Phil has it right, although an oxidising flame is useful for ally - the fluxes help remove dissolved hydrogen (which ally has a major affinity for in the molten state) which will otherwise outgas during solidification, making the castings porous... An oxidising flame will help reduce this (umm, incorrect term, reducing is not enough oxygen, but you know what i mean! - minimise this?), I'm told most of the hydrogen in molten drinks cans comes from the paint and plastic coatings, similar for oily scrap - it seems a bit much degreasing scrap before melting it, but it helps! SOME of the hydrogen comes from the fuel though, unless you're using charcoal/forced draught.
 Some professional foundries use both flux and an inert gas bubbled through the melt t remove the hydrogen - never tried gas myself but I' told it can be very effective, argon's used for top-quality castings for aerospace... Spendy!

If you're after best quality castings, it's worth starting with an alloy that's intended for casting - call at an engine rebuilders and offer them over scrap price (about 25 cents a pound) for old pistons, cracked cylinder heads etc., they're a really good, strong, easily-cast alloy (high silicon content - be sure to unscrew the bolts and studs though, and remove piston gudgeon/wrist pins) and if you have to dilute it go for extrusions (window frames etc.) up to 20 or 30% - extruding alloys (the 6000 and 7000 series) are relatively very low in silicon, have all kinds of oddities in 'em!
 For flux, lo-salt wrapped in ally foil works well and is available in most grocery aisles :)

 The big problem with DIY crucibles (reduced with Phil's suggesed refractory wash) is that molten ally will dissolve the iron from a steel crucible, ruining it and buggering up the ally's properties (it gets brittle, doesn't flow and cast well, you name it) - this is why tin-can crucibles normally leak on the first melt and pee in the bottom of your furnace! Your poor result in the experiment with adding the angle brackets may have been down to dissolved iron in the melt?
 The wash doesn't need to be anything fancy, fireclay watered down to a creamy consistency and fired works well enough, specially if you go to the bother of checking it and renewing if needed betweeen melts.
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Offline Meldonmech

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Re: Melting aluminuim cans
« Reply #5 on: March 14, 2015, 05:19:42 PM »
 
  I have come to the same conclusion, the same melting swarf. I also tried removing the can lids and filling them with compressed swarf. What with the gas used and time taken,compared with the amount of aluminium extracted, it was a none starter.
                                                     Cheers David