100model
Well-Known Member
I watched this video about him trying to melt steel, no surprise that it failed. A long time ago I tried the same experiment and failed so let me give the reasons why it failed. Steel at room temperature is very unreactive but when steel is heated to close to the melting point it becomes very reactive and burns. When steel is cut with a cutting torch it does not melt but it burns because oxygen is used. Some small ball bearing races were used in my experiment which has a large carbon content for hardness and chromium. So what happened was it all turned into iron oxide slag which has a low melting point and I poured it into a sand mold. I thought it was a success until I tapped it with a hammer and it shattered. In his video he tilts the crucible and sees the same thing. So how come the steel did burn when the furnace atmosphere is carbon dioxide when burning propane? At high temperatures carbon dioxide is unstable when carbon is present so graphite in a crucible is the carbon source. Carbon dioxide breaks down to carbon monoxide and oxygen which combines with the steel to form iron oxide.
Green twin tried this experiment with thick chunks of steel with the edges burning but never melted the large diameter round bars. I would recommend this experiment to anyone to satisfy their curiosity if it can be done.
Green twin tried this experiment with thick chunks of steel with the edges burning but never melted the large diameter round bars. I would recommend this experiment to anyone to satisfy their curiosity if it can be done.