Making Model Steam Engine Castings in the Home Workshop
Ғылым және технология
My learning-journey into the exciting world of metal casting at home, Here I show my early attempts at casting aluminium engine cylinders and flywheels.
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Channels mentioned in the video:
Mark Presling's Channel: • Epoxy Sand Cores for D...
MyfordBoy Channel: / @myfordboy
Пікірлер: 274
No worries 👍 some of us like the sounds of birds.
@AdeSwash
10 ай бұрын
Thanks Craig :)
I enjoyed the sound of the birds. It was calming as was your narration.
@WesleyHarcourtSTEAMandMORE
11 ай бұрын
Same
@AdeSwash
10 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it! Regards. Ade :)
@howder1951
3 ай бұрын
Was that a European swallow?
The birds in the background are wonderful. Great video, informative and peaceful!
@AdeSwash
10 ай бұрын
Many thanks Josh :) Regards. Ade
👍 Great work on the casting, it came out quite nicely. I will admit to rather liking the songbirds in the background as well. Excellent job all around sir, thank you.
@AdeSwash
10 ай бұрын
Cheers Gaz, glad you enjoyed the vid. Regards Ade :)
What a great video. Very informative. I did like the part about the sand core. I need to get back to melting. Hopefully this time without blowing myself up in the process.
@AdeSwash
9 ай бұрын
Best advice is to NOT blow yourself up ;)
For somone who has only been casting for a short while thats a bloody good result congrats, looking forward to more !!
@AdeSwash
8 ай бұрын
Cheers Steve :)
Excellent video. My father was a non ferrous moulder and I frequently visited the foundry. You may find benefit from obtaining a pair of old fashioned hand bellows to blow loose sand and excess talc off of the mould surfaces. Had you considered increasing the diameter of the risers but reducing their length as the metal in them will stay molten for longer ensuring complete feed of the mould. The other thing that you didn’t mention was, when making the pattern you need to allow for shrinkage, from memory dad used to say it was ¼” in a foot or 2.08%.
@AdeSwash
10 ай бұрын
Thanks for the tips, I do need a blower of some type, bellows would be good. I hadn't considered the diameter of the riser but yes it sounds like it would work well, Thanks
Love the small unobtanium sign on the shelf 🙂
@AdeSwash
7 ай бұрын
I reveal the Unobtainium in a future video - Stay Tuned ;)
Very interesting project. Excellent video recording and very pleasant narration.
@AdeSwash
9 ай бұрын
Thanks
I've seen lots of videos from Myford Boy, Prezzo and others and this is THE simplest and least faffy setup I've seen. Well explained and no voodoo involved. Great stuff 👍👍
@AdeSwash
10 ай бұрын
Glad you liked the vid Andrew :) Thanks
Be sure to pre-heat the second lot of scrap before adding it to the crucible! Any moisture on the surface can flash to steam and give unprotected parts a painful silvery coating of aluminium.
Very nicely produced video.
@AdeSwash
10 ай бұрын
Thankyou David :)
Extremely clean castings, and well-shot and well-explained process, with some intermediate explanations that I hadn't heard in detail before. Your voice and pacing are very calm and deliberate: easy to follow.
@AdeSwash
11 ай бұрын
Thanks Hyratel :)
very detailed overview of all needed process steps, thanks a lot, very impressive
They are nice clean castings Ade. I have used epoxy sand cores in brass castings and they work fine. Regards, Preso.
@AdeSwash
10 ай бұрын
Thanks Mark, that is good to know! Cheers, Ade
Love the birds in the back ground. They are a real feel of spring and summer with their feathers changing at this time of year.
@AdeSwash
10 ай бұрын
Thankyou :)
Excellent video in every way, many thanks.
@AdeSwash
10 ай бұрын
Thank you!
Nice clean castings, molten alloy will dissolve your steel tart tins, I coat mine with a refractory wash, Petrobond's expensive, I use a facing with a layer of petrobond & back up with Mansfield red [greensand] & make my cores from windblown sea sand, linseed oil dextrin & water & bake them in the rayburn [when the missus is out!!] when I taught students to cast I told them an easy way to remember the flask parts is "life's a DRAG when you're on the bottom but you can COPE when you're on the top" hehe. Graham.
@AdeSwash
11 ай бұрын
Thank you for the information Graham, that is a great way to remember the parts of the flask! I'll never get it mixed up again. I normally use my box of 'already used' petrobond which has been reconstituted with a bit of motor oil as a filler after the clean facing sand has gone in, but it does smoke more than the new stuff, so chose to use just the new stuff for the video. Thanks. Ade
@headstocktailstock
11 ай бұрын
@@AdeSwash So can you reconstitute it then Ade? I usually throw the burnt stuff away & make sure the greensands not mixed with it at shakeout, & is it just motor oil? cheers Graham.
@AdeSwash
11 ай бұрын
@@headstocktailstock I get rid of the big burnt lumps but the smaller ones get crumbled and go back in, with a few drops of motor oil added if it feels too dry. I only use it for backing up after facing with new stuff
You could always turn down the outside of the flywheels to press fit into a cut section of steel pipe for added weight
From an old bloke in his shed nice one,M😀
Thanks for the interesting video
Lovely job Ade. 🙂 I hope the wife appreciated her roasting tray back unharmed and the Sunday spuds didn't taste too oily or gritty. ;-)
@AdeSwash
11 ай бұрын
Hahaha! 😁
An excellent video .. thanks for taking the time and trouble to produce it. I'm 75 and learned a great deal.
Great stuff, very interesting. Many, many uses for that. 😁
@AdeSwash
9 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching! Ade
I’m only 1 minute in and already loving it!
Very well explained Ade! A big thumbs up from the Colonies!
@AdeSwash
8 ай бұрын
Many thanks
Great video Ade. Looking forward to seeing your creations come to life! Thank you for sharing. Joe
@AdeSwash
10 ай бұрын
Thanks Joe :)
An excellent opportunity to rewatch the video and be even more inspired than previously. 👏👏👍😀
@AdeSwash
10 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it Andrew :) Best Regards. Ade
I have to say, that was a very good tutorial as how to cast items... Thumbs Up!
@AdeSwash
10 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it Gary :)
Nice clean casting, Thanks for the teaching.
My ford boy has been doing this for years. But he never speaks lol.
Thank You for sharing. Well done and interesting presentation. 🙂
@AdeSwash
9 ай бұрын
Thank you Brian :)
Very comprehensive.... excellent!
Wow, great video. Very well put together and I learned something! Thanks for your time to do this.
Informative and very well done! Thnx!
Nice job! I believe the drag is so named that for large casting pattern boxes which were too heavy to lift, they were pulled or dragged around the foundry floor with hooks or ropes. In fact it was a common way to move metal boxes around when I was an engineering apprentice. A 2 foot or so long metal rod with ends bent at right angles, where one end was hooked into the handle of the metal box and the other end held in the hand and the box of components dragged along the factory floor. I've never worked in a foundry although I have visited them as part of my work. But I did metalwork at school and we cast a few things like aluminium file and pad saw handles.
@geoffreyharbinson2488
9 ай бұрын
When you were filling the box you were resting from from dragging ...when you were dragging you were resting from filling ...Seems to me that job was one big rest you had ........Said to me as a young lad in a similar job .. I can tell you I was not pleased LOL All the Best Monty
You beautiful man ! Thank you for making this magnificant tutorial.
@AdeSwash
6 ай бұрын
Thankyou :)
I had an idea when I saw the crucible 26:19 Maybe you can coat the graphite crucibles with air dry, or even oven set ,ceramic coatings, Cera coat it's used on pistons, exhaust, and lots more, if it made a crucible basically indestructible it may be worth it, it had been said to hold an aluminum piston together after it had gotten so hot it melted! If it protects the crucible allowing it to last 10x 20x or much more longer, I don't think the crucibles are that expensive, but a dollar saved and all, another thing, I believe going to a salvage yard, buying scrap allow rims, cutting them up, 'making aluminum inguits for later pours, it pours very well, and can be nearly free, if you don't mind the work! It is an alloy, designed to be cast, and look perfect!
@AdeSwash
10 ай бұрын
Hi James, yes I agree, alloy wheels are a good high grade ali to use for casting! I will look up Cera-Coat as it sounds like it would be a good coating. Thanks. Ade
Ade i gotta say: i love your Voice. its so calm and fits perfect to your Nice edited Videos. The Video is very informative ! thanks
@AdeSwash
9 ай бұрын
Thank you Permin😃 I really appreciate your message, I'm glad you like my narration :) All the best. Ade
@pirminkogleck4056
9 ай бұрын
i am just done with the darn crosshead/ conecting rod /crankshaft playing around untill i get mad my crankshaft seem to have a little ammount of throw, and my conrod was never sttaight from the beginning, in the end i had to tap it with the mallet, and machine of about 0,2mm of the big end side, still it is a bit tight on bottom dead center...i run it in now on the handheld drill but hope it will loosen up with a bit more tweaking . not as easy as it all seems in the videos ! @@AdeSwash
Nice work,congratulations.
great informative video on the practice for home use.
@AdeSwash
6 ай бұрын
Thankyou, metal casting in a home shop is good creative fun!
15:21 😂 I love that we can hear you whisper "that was the scary bit" like your soufle might deflate if you're too loud. Lovely video.
@AdeSwash
10 ай бұрын
:)
Excellent work!
@AdeSwash
9 ай бұрын
Glad you like it!
Loved the vid, can't wait to see the engine 🙂
@AdeSwash
10 ай бұрын
Coming soon Paul :)
Although I have no intrest in model trains, your documentation and clearly shown process for making the mold, sand, risers and everything else about the process of making an aluminum casting is amazing. If anyone i know needs a walkthrough of how to do it, i will show them this video.
@AdeSwash
9 ай бұрын
I'm glad you enjoyed it @Arzon527 Its all still new to me :) Regards. Ade.
Just stumbled on this video. Great work and really informative, cheers from the Far East
@AdeSwash
9 ай бұрын
Many thanks - peace and goodwill to you! Regards Ade
Wow I can't get over well your channel is doing
I like the gate pattern idea, very neat and far better that scooping the gates out afterwards! Phil
@philhermetic
5 ай бұрын
I have a virtually identical furnace, mine came from Vevor, and the element quit after one heat! Luckily they (eventually) settled the warranty and i bought a new British made element for it. They are very quick and convenient for small castings. Phil
Mum’s going to be Angry with you using her Muffin and Cake pans! Nice job, I love watching melting video’s. I’m a hobby machinist also. 👍
@AdeSwash
8 ай бұрын
Thanks Ross, she did ask if I had seen the muffin tray, but I denied all knowledge ;)
@nlo114
6 ай бұрын
Sunday beef and Yorkshires were a bit crunchy...
Late comment, flawless casting one of the cleanest.
LIKE YOU ATTITUDE ON THIS .. COMING FROM A DIFFERENT POINT OF VIEW. MADE ME THINK AGAIN.. AN LOOK TWICE.. HOPE YOU KEEP IT UP .. TONE UK
Using a small paint brush and a little water to swab the edges of the pattern pieces will aid in the removal of the pattern pieces from the mould halves. You may need to de-gas the molten aluminium to avoid possible gas holes in the castings. De-gassing tablets should be available from a local foundry supplies merchant or a local foundry.
@AdeSwash
9 ай бұрын
Great tip! I will try this :)
@johnkillian4719
9 ай бұрын
Not with a oil based sand. That only works with a water based sand.
This seems interesting, may have to try this with a 3d printed pattern instead of wood...
@AdeSwash
9 ай бұрын
Yep 3D is the way to go for patterns!
Those aluminium muffins look very tasty
@AdeSwash
9 ай бұрын
They take some chewing! :)
Great video 😀👍… Thanks ade
@AdeSwash
9 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it. Regards. Ade
Excellent video!
@AdeSwash
9 ай бұрын
Thank you very much!
you are an inspiration...i see molten metal in my future.
@AdeSwash
10 ай бұрын
Hey Prof.Simon, you would really enjoy this, hot, dangerous and scary, but superb fun :) All the best. Ade
Fine work, Sir.
@AdeSwash
9 ай бұрын
Thank you kindly
Very nice video. I’ll definitely will have to look into it in the future
@AdeSwash
6 ай бұрын
Cheers Rusty, sorry, I haven't forgotten about the sticker just not got it sorted yet
Great video Sir !! Thank you.
@AdeSwash
9 ай бұрын
Glad you liked it! Regards Ade
Have just watched this vid, like it and am now a subscriber. Excellent vid, no bullshit and love the comments when taking out the patterns - that is exactly how I would feel doing it. Very well presented with excellent content and information. Don’t think that I will be forging but you have made it look achievable. Thanks Stewart .
The background sound is wonderful. Beats some overplayed, corny music soundtrack any day.
@AdeSwash
9 ай бұрын
Thankyou :)
Hi , I don’t mind the birds there quite nice actually like the Suffolk punch at the beginning it shows you’re truly in a lovely British garden ( or was it a qualcast? ) Great video enjoyed the content and learned a little more about casting very nice job on that btw , and your very fast with a hack saw too 👍🏻
@AdeSwash
10 ай бұрын
Many thanks Peter, it is indeed a Qualcast Suffolk Punch 12" - Very lovely old mower :) Kind Regards. Ade
Very interesting. I have done some casting myself but it's always nice to see others work. Nice
@AdeSwash
10 ай бұрын
Thanks @Desmouffe :)
I don't know how much talc you use but I used quite a lot mixed with fibre glass resin as a cheap car type filler to make a fibre glass pattern for making fibre glass moulds to make some parts I needed for a large model. I bought 25kilo from a fibre glass supplier based in Redruth, Cornwall, a good source for cheap paint brushes and latex and rubber gloves, very useful for clean hands playing with graphite. They also do a large range of mixing pots. They also do 5kg of talc for £12.17.
Excellent video , Thank you sir.
@AdeSwash
10 ай бұрын
Glad you liked it :)
Nice work!
@AdeSwash
3 ай бұрын
Thanks!
Briliant video Ade thanks very much,
@AdeSwash
9 ай бұрын
No worries, many thanks for watching Regards. Ade
excellent video, glad I came across it, now subscribed thank you
@AdeSwash
9 ай бұрын
Thanks Mike :)
Thanks for this. I've been eyeing that furnace as a way into metal casting.
@AdeSwash
10 ай бұрын
Hi David, it certainly is a good entry point to metal casting, I love it!
Brilliant work as always, Ade!
@AdeSwash
11 ай бұрын
Cheers Stan :)
@AdeSwash
10 ай бұрын
Thanks Stan :) Best Regards. Ade
Well done Mr Swash
@AdeSwash
9 ай бұрын
Thanks :)
Good video. I use the CO2 process for core making. Good to see you at Claymills today
@AdeSwash
11 ай бұрын
Good to meet you today Ian :)
Try baby powder on the inside of the conduit when making the sand core.
Exellent video,im glad i came across it. Id reccomend Doubleboost's channel,he also has some fantastic casting tips and tricks. You have certainly earned a new subscriber.
@AdeSwash
9 ай бұрын
Thanks Thomas, yes I watch Doubleboost amongst many others youtubers, all give great advice and teachings
Excellent vid and demonstration of moulding/casting to offset the high price of the casting kits available. I got here on a push from "Mr. Factotum" so good luck with the subs, here's hoping you got "viral" cheers!
Nice job
So much better! At least the bird noises are in the background this time!
@AdeSwash
10 ай бұрын
Glad you liked the 2nd version Michael - Regards. Ade
Hello Ade, that's one very tasty bit of work. I admire your skill at pattern making etc. I had a relative who worked in a local foundry and saw some of his patterns for machine parts. There is no doubt that pattern making alone is a work of art. Cheers.
@AdeSwash
11 ай бұрын
Yes, I agree, pattern making is becoming a lost art due to modern 3D printing
Rather than using a zinc alloy, could you not get some steel pipe and put steel crowns on the flywheels to give them a bit more mass?
Great video Ade 👍
@AdeSwash
10 ай бұрын
Thanks Yoo :)
Wonderful tutorial Video, i love the fact that i am not the only one who used kitchen tools from my wife 😂😂😂😂😂
@AdeSwash
9 ай бұрын
Glad you liked it
Great video and very informative. I think you've got cope and drag terms the wrong way around. The drag is at the bottom and the cope has the risers.
Very nice castings
@AdeSwash
10 ай бұрын
Thankyou :)
You could use a small coarse fabric bag to powder your surfaces also. Just by hitting the surfaces you'll get powder in them.
@bossdog1480
9 ай бұрын
Pakastani style. 😊
Very nice job. Love it. How about shrinking a steel rim or tire onto the aluminium flywheel for extra rotating mass?
@AdeSwash
10 ай бұрын
Thanks Martin, good idea :)
Something that interests me also. Maybe one day.
This is really cool, i want to do the same thing on a smaller scale to make silver then gold watch cases. Incidentally i used to work for Tecumseh engines we had light medium and heavy flywheel options. Light were aluminium, medium were zamac and heavy were cast iron. If you want to increase the mass of your flywheel, more than casting from zamac will achieve, pressing a steel band onto the rim might be an option. Finally, an inboard flywheel could be a nightmare if you need to run belts off of it.
My favorite youtube channel 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
@AdeSwash
7 ай бұрын
Thankyou - very kind of you :)
NEW EDIT UPLOADED - Sorry about the loud Blackbirds, problem is now fixed - unfortunately youtube does not allow me to replace video, so have lost the likes and comments
@andypandy9931
11 ай бұрын
I very much like the birdsong Ade.
@howardosborne8647
11 ай бұрын
Is this second viewing the Ade Swash definition of 'retweeting' 🐦🐦.......🤣
@AdeSwash
11 ай бұрын
@@howardosborne8647 took me a while!.....🤣😂🤣😂😛
Nice video, thanks! Another option for the flywheel may be to get some thick walled steel pipe and use it to make the rim of the wheel as a separate part. The rim is what counts most for storing momentum so if you can get the weight there you will have a great flywheel
@AdeSwash
10 ай бұрын
Great tip! - Thanks :)
Very interesting subbed Steve Bristol :) Nuff Said.
@AdeSwash
10 ай бұрын
Thanks Steve, best regards, Ade :)
What I could find as to the etymology of cope and drag is as follows: The word cope evolved from the latin word for a woman's head covering. The word drag came from an ancient norse word meaning load, something heavy that would be dragged.
I seem to recall that molasses was used instead of epoxy to make cores in the old days
nice job
@AdeSwash
9 ай бұрын
Thanks!
All good. Just enjoying your videos, but it will be nice. Thanks
looks like your part came out very well. I use flour, a little molasses and water as a binder for core sand. Have to bake it in the toaster over at 350 F for about 4 hours. Less expensive than expox.
@AdeSwash
9 ай бұрын
Thanks for the tips!
Excellent video Ade. I've just started using Zamak also. The engine I'm now building called for Bronze flywheels. I knew Bronze would be expensive so looked at Brass. I'm an ex-pat now living in New Zealand and metals not cheap here. Brass was going to cost me approx. £130.00....Ouch! Zamac is a lot cheaper. Won't look the same but couldn't justify the price. Loved the birds singing away.. Regards Kevin
@AdeSwash
11 ай бұрын
Hi Kevin, the cost of metal has risen here in the UK also, especially non-ferrous, I'm really pleased with the zamak, it pours like water and gives superfine detail, and turning it is a delight. Cheers. Ade :)
Remarkable.
@AdeSwash
9 ай бұрын
Thanks 😊
Eu sou do Brasil. Gostei sou doido para construir um motor a vapor. Felicidades.