There are a couple of approaches to furnaces that are common.Have you made any posts about your furnace? interested in making one similar
One is the coated (or sometimes non-coated) ceramic fiber blanket furnace, and the other is the cast refractory thin hotface furnace.
The consensus among the backyard casters I know is that an uncoated ceramic blanket furnace puts dangerous fibers into the air, and ultimately into your lungs. Despite the junk science that has been posted about ceramic fibers in the lungs, the truth is that they don't break down, and they do ruin your lungs.
The only safe ceramic blanket furnace is one that has the blanket surface fully coated with some high temperature material such as satanite.
The coating must be maintained throughout the life of the furnace, and the ceramic blanket not allowed to degrade.
The good part about ceramic blanket furnaces is that they are relatively easy and inexpensive to initially build.
The downside to ceramic blanket furnaces (in my opinion, and opinions differ on this) is that the are not very rugged, and don't stand up to abuse very well, such as bumping into the surface with a crucible or lifting tongs.
I use a 1" thick cast refractory hot face that uses a material called Mizou, and it stands up well to iron temperatures and iron slag.
It should be noted that cast refractory that is operated at iron temperatures will crack, and cracked refractory should not be confused with refractory that is crumbling/disentigrating.
Patching cracks in Mizou is a minor thing, and the cracks don't really affect the long term performace of the hot face, or the durability.
I used a layer of insulating fire bricks around my hot face, basically to give a rigid surface to somewhat support the cast refractory.
Outside of my insulating bricks is two layers of 1" ceramic blanket, and then a stainless steel metal shell.
With both insulating fire bricks and ceramic blanket, the cost goes up exponentially with the temperature rating.
The only affordable insulating fire bricks and ceramic blanket is in the 2,600 F range as far as operating temperature.
They do make 3,000 F insulating fire bricks and ceramic blanket, and basically sell as if they were gold.
Mizou I think it rated around 3,000 F, and thus it makes a good hot face.
Mizou is a dense refractory, and thus it is important to minimize the use of it in the furnace, since the speed at which a furnace will melt metal is directly related to its mass.
My first furnace used a 3" thick wall of dense refractory, and that was a blunder, since the high mass of the furnace took over 30 minutes to come up to iron melting temperaures, and thus 30 mintues of time and fuel are wasted with every new melt.
My second and current furnace uses 1" of dense refractory, and it brings iron up to pour temperature much more quickly (generally in about an hour).
So a word of warning to the wise; protect the lungs at all cost when doing foundry work, because the cost can be total disability or death.
When using/cutting/handling foundry sand, fire bricks, ceramic blanket, cast refractory, parting dust, etc., wear a commercial grade respirator that will totally block all of this material from getting into the lungs.
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