Me too, just bought a Leman pot last yearI prefer using pure lead even if it cost more, which it does. Always used a cast iron pot over a propane grill. Finally bought a Lee electric pot. I’m getting fancy now.
Getting old and lazy
Me too, just bought a Leman pot last yearI prefer using pure lead even if it cost more, which it does. Always used a cast iron pot over a propane grill. Finally bought a Lee electric pot. I’m getting fancy now.
Does that mean you have to cast for 24 hours straight...Me too, just bought a Leman pot last year
Getting old and lazy
You honestly go from asking about lead contamination too giving advice (?)Funny how that weight adds up.
My local auto repair shop owner had a sailboat and a zillion pounds of lead ballast.
I had roto metals test a few 50 pound chunks. Some ingots were pure lead. Another ingot was 95.5 lead and 4.5 antimony.
Adding in 5% tin gave me Lyman #2. An excellent alloy for many modern applications.
I guess not enough auto racing fans here to get that pun.Does that mean you have to cast for 24 hours straight...
You would have to have at least 2, then it would be 24 hours of Lemans.Does that mean you have to cast for 24 hours straight...
I cast pure lead balls at about 800+*F. Zinc melts at 781*F.Keep the zinc below the zinc melting temperature and the zinc won't be a problem.
650 degrees melts lead and nothing else.
Then the zinc and the steel and the clips all float to the surface to be skimmed off.
This is not a difficult concept to understand.
Are you saying that if you melt a lead/zinc alloy then the zinc will float to the top?Keep the zinc below the zinc melting temperature and the zinc won't be a problem.
650 degrees melts lead and nothing else.
Then the zinc and the steel and the clips all float to the surface to be skimmed off.
This is not a difficult concept to understand.
If you are melting wheel weights you have to keep your pot/stove below the Zinc melting point so the Zinc weights remain solid and you can pick them out. If it melts into the lead and you have an alloy Thats when you start making fishing sinkers. Here in California lead wheel weights are almost gone and there's not even a reason to try using them anymore. But when I can buy lead on Ebay for less then $2 / Lb I don't bother.I'm not 64springer but I don't think that's what he's saying,he's saying lead melts at lower temperature then zinc so if temp kept below zink melting temperature the solid zink floats, I've always been careful and sorted before casting so as of yet I haven't melted any zink,I do believe once zink melted into lead that batch is ruined
Yes that makes perfect sense. Thank you.I'm not 64springer but I don't think that's what he's saying,he's saying lead melts at lower temperature then zink so if temp kept below zink melting temperature the solid zink floats, I've always been careful and sorted before casting so as of yet I haven't melted any zink,I do believe once zink melted into lead that batch is ruined
Most of the lead I buy on Ebay comes in the form rcbs/lee/lyman ingots so I think its coming from shooters in other states that collect more lead than they need. I could get an even better deal if I had some way to process 30-40 pound chunks.Here in California lead is now considered hazmat.
Not everyone agrees with that. Most serious ml'ers go with soft lead all the time. All
If you want to cast round ball I suggest the following:Hey all,
Looking for a little bit of feedback. Looking into casting my own round balls. I can get scrap lead from my local scrapyard for $.75 a pound. I can buy as much or as little as I like. I’ve been looking into trying to find it for free, but hasn’t panned out.
They had lead roofing boots and other miscellaneous scrap lead. They also had some ingots. Most of it when dropped on concrete had just a dull thunk with no ring. At $.75 for scrap lead is that reasonable?
Get a hot plate for molds /ladle and don't throw any back ,and if you need a break (back on the hot plate) and start back where you left off. And if your running multiples (molds) a hot plate is a must and their cheap ! EdYep , price sounds good . Get ya a bullet mold and a little flux and your good to go. Always like making round ball ..If you cast some from wheel weight just keep them separated but it all has a purpose . Good luck . Wear gloves ... And eye protection ... The first 2-3 ball throw back into the pot . This heats up the mold and then the rest of the balls will run good ....use a stick of wood or a wood handle to smack open the sprue cutter on tip of the mold ...I dont like aluminum molds but some folks do . Love my steel Lyman Round ball mold .
Here's what I do.Hey all,
Looking for a little bit of feedback. Looking into casting my own round balls. I can get scrap lead from my local scrapyard for $.75 a pound. I can buy as much or as little as I like. I’ve been looking into trying to find it for free, but hasn’t panned out.
They had lead roofing boots and other miscellaneous scrap lead. They also had some ingots. Most of it when dropped on concrete had just a dull thunk with no ring. At $.75 for scrap lead is that reasonable?
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