100model
Well-Known Member
So what I found out making this video that different sheet metals can give widely different recovery rates and some machine really well to very poor machining without cutting fluid.
It is the same where I live so because of that I have always used scrap and have never purchased ingots. I have used wheels all the time and give great results. I was surprised how well the cans machined but the heatsinks needed cutting fluid and then gave a really good surface.Getting "proper" aluminium ingots is very difficult, unless you buy dozens of kilo's.
How many times did you try?I just melt cans, swarf, thick foil, etc. other aluminium to make "scrap" bar for screwdriver handles - or whatever. But hammer it tight and drop it into the molten aluminium in the pot while it melts - submersed - and I manage to get away with some useful billets for machining. I don't cast parts in moulds... failed miserably when I tried a flywheel in Mazak.
Interesting thread finding out all the things I do that are wrong.
Thanks guys.
K2
Doing proper heat treatment of Aluminium is not really easy for the home shop. Material must be held at right temperature for very long time and then quenched quickly. It is easy get it wrong "Hardened" Aluminum machines much nicer than soft state, one reason I always buy new bar stock.A couple of questions which will reveal both my interest and my ignorance on this topic:
1) Would the machining properties of these various ingots be improved by "tempering"? I confess that I don't actually know what that term means with respect to aluminum, but I'm aware that some grades of aluminum are miserable to machine when untempered, but well behaved when tempered ... or something like that.
2) Is it possible to add silicon or other alloying ingredients to the melt to improve the properties? I have seen videos with cast iron where the caster adds ferro-silicon (? or something like that) to improve properties.
Why not keep trying? It sounds to me like you didn't give it enough tries.Richard, I have made about a half dozen billets of aluminium from scrap in ny 3in High crucible, poured into a plot steel tube to make a bar for a screwdriver handle or something equally "low engineered".
One or 2 have just been remelted as wrong in various ways. But my Mazak piece is on a running model engine. It was a casting for a cylinder end cap with combined cross head guide. I used a plaster mould.
K2
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