Andy nice one, real nice in fact..
Thank you, Steve! One of the primary purposes to try foundry work was to make turning stock. Buying a 1-1/2" round of aluminum would be dear. But making one of old window frames and soda cans is a blast.
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result !!
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Andy: you made that very usable tool from a piece of scrap in a few days. WOW!! and thanks for the great pictures and how you made it too.
Thanks, Drives!! This stuff is so easy, I try to post along so others who have the inclination to try it might gain a little confidence.
Wow.
The finished product looks amazing Andy.
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Thanks! Glad to see you come around!
Good to hear about another Muck Boot wearer !! I'd be lost without mine. This fall I picked up a pair of tall Artic Sports and am enjoying my feet being almost too warm. Down in the deep South where it rarely freezes hard I'd doubt you'd ever need them but up here in the land of frozen lakes they are an amazing thing to have.
Do you leave Bob the Cats tracks on year round ??
It's good to see you're sticking to the theme of your thread and cleaning up your shop by turning old treasures into new treasures. The best part is when you decide to clean up again you can mention them back into whatever you want
I only wear the Muck Boots when it's wet. Used to have just plain rubber boots and my feet would just about freeze in 25F slush and mud. With Muck boots I don't even know it's cold.
The tracks add stability, flotation, and they never spin unless you're getting in real deep in which case it's time to abandon the load and push yourself back. We have quicksand around here, even on hillsides where shallow subsurface water will wet fine sugar sand. I stuck a TD-18 one time after pulling a lime truck out that had bogged down. After he got out I back drug the tracks (in a field I cultivated) and the second pass it had turned to mush and the tracks dropped two feet BAM!!. A bear to get out without additional equipment. They were about $2,000 and are supposed to last 2,000 hours so really not a high cost for the utility. McLaren.
My fear of running out of scrap is causing it to accumulate faster than I'm melting it...
That is pretty damn cool Andy. Or is it hot?
Bret
Thanks, Bret! I can't tell the difference between opposites. Hot/cold, up/down, etc. Going cold turkey is a hot idea these days. We had a business here shut down, or close up, I don't know.
I do have a burning desire to make cold hard castings.
Andy three inch pieces are ok as I have 36 one inch by 1/4 dowel pins to make for the cabinet I am planning. This will give me enough to chuck up and for waste from cutting. It's for my tools but if Ginny decides she wants some like it in the kitchen I'm in trouble.
Great tutorial on the burner.
OK, I'll save some scraps. You might try a dowel cutter for a drill press. I don't have any but I think they work pretty good, just a hollow bit.
The stuff you make is so nice you are always in trouble.
It's gratifying to pass along what you've learned when you see other people take it and do much better with the knowledge. Everyone has their part to add if they will try a new craft.
Thanks for the comments, guys. I'm off to Houston for cancer checkup.

Hershey will watch the shop.
In other news, I may be experiencing some frustration. I have a gas line that runs across my property. Produced gas, but it's pretty clean. years ago they wouldn't sell me any but now sell to a neighbor. I have determined another piece they cross they do not have legal access. I've mentioned it to them over the years and now they have decided it might be a liability and have offered me a farm tap in exchange for giving them right of way. A traditional farm tap was offered to farmers in lieu of right of way compensation. They would set a valve with no meter and the farmer could use what he wanted. The value of the gas is low, it's the pipeline and delivery that costs. So after a little negotiations they have offered me all the free gas I want.
So with gas to heat the shop, do pottery, foundry melting, pre-heating, heat treating, forging, emergency generator, etc. I see frustration coming on with no value in economizing. I'll suffer and bear up somehow. I would like to have a single cylinder oil field engine to turn a jackshaft to run the trip hammer.

Maybe a steam boiler for steam cleaning and a steam turbine generator...


