Success. Eventually.....lol
Started off printing new modified patterns of my tool rack brackets, Power went out about an hour in, and when It came back on It wouldn't restart properly. Bummer. Started again and had a bit of pullup on the buildplate in one of the corners. Bummer two. Rest looked fine so I just let it finish, and figured I try and fix it with some casting resin.
You can see the pullup in the lower rh corner, as well as the failed prints in the background.
Some popsicle sticks, a glass platten, and some hotmelt had me a quick and dirty dam to pour some alumilite casting resin into to try and rebuild that corner.
Did a bit of carving while it was still a bit green, and will sand and reshape it a bit better after dinner. While this was going on I was printing another set of patterns, that just finished actually. They came out good with no issues.
While the resin was hardening I had the foundry fired up, and was melting down some more small chunks of scrap. Man I really need a bigger foundry....
I rammed up another pattern I printed last weekend, for a hub to make a rotating compost bin out of hdpe barrels. Not a project that "needed" a casting, but I wanted to. Took a few attempts with various different failures before I finally got one right. The last attempt fell apart as I was putting the cope on for the last time....argh.
I need to make some better flasks. The cope is too thin to properly hold the sand on these ones.
With the crucible ready to go, I quickly rammed up another attempt, and honestly think it was my best mold yet.
I was getting really nervous while pouring wondering if I had my math right. I designed these parts this way to make sure I had enough volume in a crucible to pour. When the aluminum start coming up the riser I breathed a sigh of relief lol. Still had enough for a small ingot too.
Success, a good casting. Even the dimples for bolt holes came through. A bit of shrinkage near the riser, as It's WAY too small for that big section (flasks too thin). I might have to use a myfordboy type can in the future for stuff like this, but for this particular part it doesn't matter the center gets bored out anyway. Good learning experience though.
Riding high, I decided to ram up another and charge another crucible. This is the first back to back casting I've ever done, and was really surprised at how quickly another crucible melted. About 45 minutes for the first pour, and about 10 for the second. I need more flasks and more sand, and then I can get into some good back to back action.
2nd mold wasn't as good as the first, but still produced some useable castings, albeit requiring a bit more cleanup.
Taking a break for dinner, then I will cleanup the bracket patterns, and maybe have a go at casting some of those tonight. I really want to get those racks done this week sometime.