As the title says...I am drinking a beer an idea just hit me...and this is something I think I will look into and talk with this one person who I know how is a fab/welder that I am friends with...maybe get it to work...
I have an pretty big issue...I get alot of aluminum..it takes up a HUGE amount of space...and so I have to take it in even tho I want to hold onto it until I have a larger amount.
I have thought about casting my aluminum before but tossed the idea out for a few reasons...you need to melt them pour being one of the biggest ones..the other big issue is the small amount you can fit into it at a time..so it takes alot of fuel to heat and melt...small pour amount unless you have a BIG setup but even then you can only melt so much at a time....
So here is my idea...
Do what the big refinery companies do an do a non stop pour...well how would that be done....well aluminum dose not take a huge amount of heat to melt...so if you used a metal pot thats 1/4think or so maybe even made of SS steel....have a hole made in the bottom that has a small pipe that comes out that will pour onto a "box" of sand (encase of over pours) and have your molds under the pipe..
all you have to do is keep feeding the aluminum into the top (into the pot) and as it melts it will come out and auto cast it self....it will take less time...you can add more into the melting pot at a time and it auto casts....now...if you can have a slide valve that you can "close off" the whole so that you can move the molds around if you need to but keep melting/adding...that should not take much time...high amount of casting with less fuel needed...so thats more money saved from fuel to labor.
Now if this will work with aluminum it could work with anything below the melting point of steel or what ever you are using as the pot item. So a high temp steel would be good if you want to up the temp of the melting pot.
I will have to think about this...this next coming week if I don't forget..but I think it could be a great idea...I could then stack the aluminum MUCH better than putting it in 55gallon drums
with copper melting point up in the 1900F steel around 2500F
And..thats all...bed time.
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