Re: [gingery_machines] Foundry dimensions

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Thursday, August 4, 2011

 

Jim,

Here is my 2 cents but it is for an electric furnace -

http://rick.sparber.org/Articles/CD/hef.pdf

Rick
Rick.Sparber.org

On Aug 4, 2011, at 10:57 AM, Jim Ash <ashcan@earthlink.net> wrote:

>
> Gents -
>
> I've been taking my time and putting together a nice foundry furnace that I hope will last me a long time when I'm done. I've got some good commercial castable refractory, some ITC-100 magically showed up in the mail yesterday and some kaowool is due in the next day or so. I put together a spreadsheet (which I'll probably clean up and download to the files section for list consumption at some point) which takes in some basic dimensions and outputs volumes of refractory and dimensions for sheet metal.
>
> Although I've taken information from a number of different sources, the basic design is from 'Building a Gas-fired Crucible Furnace' (I like the ability to grab a hot charge from the side at arm's length instead of having to hover over it). I've sized it to accommodate a #8 Silicon-carbide crucible, but I've also been known to use 5- or 6-inch schedule 80 pipe in a pinch. I plan to cast the basic furnace parts, wrap the outsides of it with a couple inches of kaowool, then strap some sheet steel around it to clamp the kaowool in place.
>
> The question I've got for the group here is: How thick have you guys made your furnace walls, bottom and lid? I was planning on 2 1/2" for the side and bottom, and 3" for the lid. I may be a little tight on refractory mix, so I was wondering if I could make the side thickness 2". The question is probably more related to mechanical and thermal stresses; I figure the kaowool wrapped around the outside will significantly supplement the insulating ability of the furnace, and I'm planning on brushing it down on the inside with the ITC-100. I don't have a permanent place to keep and operate this furnace, so it will be wheeled out from a storage shed for use, which is certainly going to contribute to the mechanical stress on it.
>
> So how thick are your furnaces and would you make them that thick (or thin) again?
>
> Jim Ash
>
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