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I acquired Beeswax.

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You don't want to overheat the wax or the oil. Using a double boiler helps you to maintain a guaranteed temperature that doesn't get above 212 degrees F.

I heat the beeswax in an old canned chicken can placed directly on the burner. Heat the beeswax chunks and shavings until melted, then pour in the olive or vegetable oil, and turn the burner down to LOW or OFF. Not worried about wax catching fire. If it does, I will lay a small lid over the can and smother it out. Wax catching on fire is not a catastrophe as long as you don’t spill it.
 
I put my oil in the can 1st, then ad the bees wax.
reasons are liquid is easier to measure, the oil helps to melt the wax keeping the wax from burning.
 
See many references to different mixes, just don’t see anyone specifying if their ratios are by weigh or volume. After over 20 posts an enquiring mind would love to know.
there is no voodoo magic to the mix its just 2 parts, eyeball it! I use an old musket cap tin (or small soup can), so i fill half of it with oil, then add beeswax till its full and melt the 2 together.
its not to scientific but it works every time for me!
 
Bees wax is a hydrocarbon, just like crude oil. The hydrocarbon in toilet rings is chemically structured very nearly like beeswax. It is a quite acceptable substitute. Oilive oil, crisco etc are also hydrocarbons. Mixing these components is just a way of fiddling with the hydrocarbon structure. They all lubricate to some degree and all burn to some degree.

I use beeswax melted together with linseed oil and turpentine as a wood finish, sometimes making a paste of just beeswax and turpentine. I have a small junky sauce pan for melting the blends. I just set it dirrectly on a stove burner and keep an eys on it. Fire is the real hazard of overheating wax, which is why candles burn.
 
One ounce olive oil and one ounce beeswax. I store it in a #10 cap tin and it doubles as a decent lip balm as well.

-Jake
 
Never heard of such a thing
my son is a plumber and told me that haven't been made out of bees wax for years. now made out of a synthetic material. so don't mix it into a loading item, my solidify into a solid mass in your barrel?
 
Now that I think about it, I reckon I mix `em by volume too, sorta. What I do is melt down a chunk of beeswax and add crisco or bear grease if I've got any, or even canola oil or tallow or some other oil until it seems about right and then let `er cool and test it. If I can wipe a patch across the surface and get a good lube, it's done. If it's too hard, remelt and add oil. Too soft, add beeswax. It ain't all that compleck kompleek hard.
 
I add lanolin and whatever else I'm tinkering with, adjusting the mix to obtain the desired room temperature softness.
 
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