The Appalachian
Feral American
- Joined
- Jan 26, 2022
- Messages
- 861
- Reaction score
- 1,629
I use it a lot for a lot of things, especially in our fields of interest.
One use I love it for is fluxing a lead pot for casting roundballs and boolits. Many ways to flux a lead pot, but being a ladle pourer only, I like to keep the top of the melt clean and dross free. So throughout a 20 pound pot, I'll flux several times. Unfiltered raw beeswax is the only thing I like to use for fluxing.
What I don't like about it is, it's most commonly found in large chunks from suppliers. I find it a pain to carve off what I need. A wood chisel smacked with a hammer breaks off chunks but also makes a lot of shards. Yeah it all works the same, but I like a little more order and sanity with the whole process.
So I came up with the idea of having the same size chunks sitting handy to just grab one and toss it in the pot when needed. I tried some beeswax pellets that are very small. The problem with those is, it's triple filtered beeswax and lacks too much of the natural "trash" (carbon component?) found in the raw unfiltered. This makes the triple filtered burn up too fast and doesn't flux the way I like it. You end up using twice what you need.
So for making same size chunks of the raw wax i thought about using a bullet mold that I don't use any more but the melting point is so low on beeswax it would take too long for it to harden enough to drop them out. I ain't got time for that nonsense.
After consulting my daughter who works on the side with her sisters-in-law in a candy business, Amazon had the answer with silicone candy molds.
I melt the wax in a mini crockpot from Walmart, $10. The molds are flexible silicone candy molds from Amazon, 3 for like $10. Each square holds one half teaspoon of wax exactly. A $3 set of stainless measuring scoops from Walmart provided a perfect 1/2 teaspoon pouring ladle once I bent the handle a little.
Takes only minutes to fill each mold and have a bag full of nice same size wax cubes for a more streamlined and efficient bullet casting session.
One use I love it for is fluxing a lead pot for casting roundballs and boolits. Many ways to flux a lead pot, but being a ladle pourer only, I like to keep the top of the melt clean and dross free. So throughout a 20 pound pot, I'll flux several times. Unfiltered raw beeswax is the only thing I like to use for fluxing.
What I don't like about it is, it's most commonly found in large chunks from suppliers. I find it a pain to carve off what I need. A wood chisel smacked with a hammer breaks off chunks but also makes a lot of shards. Yeah it all works the same, but I like a little more order and sanity with the whole process.
So I came up with the idea of having the same size chunks sitting handy to just grab one and toss it in the pot when needed. I tried some beeswax pellets that are very small. The problem with those is, it's triple filtered beeswax and lacks too much of the natural "trash" (carbon component?) found in the raw unfiltered. This makes the triple filtered burn up too fast and doesn't flux the way I like it. You end up using twice what you need.
So for making same size chunks of the raw wax i thought about using a bullet mold that I don't use any more but the melting point is so low on beeswax it would take too long for it to harden enough to drop them out. I ain't got time for that nonsense.
After consulting my daughter who works on the side with her sisters-in-law in a candy business, Amazon had the answer with silicone candy molds.
I melt the wax in a mini crockpot from Walmart, $10. The molds are flexible silicone candy molds from Amazon, 3 for like $10. Each square holds one half teaspoon of wax exactly. A $3 set of stainless measuring scoops from Walmart provided a perfect 1/2 teaspoon pouring ladle once I bent the handle a little.
Takes only minutes to fill each mold and have a bag full of nice same size wax cubes for a more streamlined and efficient bullet casting session.