How to Make Homemade Petrobond Clay for Casting

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  • Опубликовано: 30 сен 2024
  • I am so tired of seeing high price tags for casting clay that I can't justify purchasing. For about $10, I decided I would try to make my own.
    After a few issues with making the actual casting box, I finally get to put my molding sand to the test. What I end up making knocks one of my long time goals off my list!
    Today's video is a culmination of everything I have learned since I started using my Devil Forge 6 months ago.
    :::::::::::::::::::::
    Music:
    Music provided by HearWeGo
    Artist: Liam Thomas
    Title: No Time
    Listen on RUclips: • Liam Thomas - No Time
    Music provided by HearWeGo (goo.gl/nDS3zR)
    Artist: Nomyn
    Title: Astral
    Listen on RUclips: • Nomyn - Astral
    Music provided by HearWeGo (goo.gl/nDS3zR)
    Artist: Ptr.
    Title: Sacred Land
    Listen on RUclips: • Ptr. - Sacred Land
    Music provided by HearWeGo (goo.gl/nDS3zR)
    Artist: Nomyn
    Title: Moonlight
    Listen on RUclips: • Nomyn - Moonlight
    Outro:
    Song: 失望した
    Artist: Eva
    www.youtube.co...
    ::::::::::::::::::::::
    And as always,
    Please Like and Subscribe. This hobby is not free for me. Propane, crucibles, rigidizer and other consumable resources are going to cost me a bit each month. Please help me out so I can keep providing videos.
    Also, check me out on Patreon
    Patreon: / bad_idea_metals

Комментарии • 63

  • @Neptunus68
    @Neptunus68 3 года назад +14

    My beloved Sir! you need to screen your sand to very fine, and also screen play sand to very fine sand, use some bentonit clay in that mix. for the details use baby powder or fine screened ash to brush the details that your gonna cast!

  • @armorpig
    @armorpig 2 месяца назад +1

    You should watch a video on this by someone who knows what they are doing...so many things wrong...

    • @badideametals
      @badideametals  2 месяца назад

      I don’t think you are understanding the point of the channel… I openly show my learning and growing over years of trial and error. This was one of my first attempts to make a copper ball. I do get one eventually :)

  • @ronnierome9165
    @ronnierome9165 2 года назад

    Do more research h. That is petrobond like.

    • @badideametals
      @badideametals  2 года назад

      You are correct, it is more Pertobond-like.

  • @benduncan3930
    @benduncan3930 Месяц назад +2

    Just stumbled on your video, the fact that you showed the mistakes and frustrations along the way helps everyone know that casting at home is more trial and error than success.

    • @badideametals
      @badideametals  29 дней назад

      I have learned a lot since posting this video. Thanks for checking this out.

  • @nesabrdza6548
    @nesabrdza6548 11 месяцев назад +1

    When did you start cutting 16.32,
    I saw that you are a total amateur without any experience :(
    Never, ever hold a metal cutting machine with only one hand if you don't want to injure yourself...
    Always put the metal in the clamp, otherwise it can jump and hurt you...

    • @badideametals
      @badideametals  11 месяцев назад +1

      All true. I do secure things most of the time… but not always. I have been working with different power tools such as grinders and saws where I have gotten too relaxed. 30 years of mistakes have formed some bad habits.
      I worked with an engineer as a teenager, and for a general contractor for industrial and commercial building and construction for a time. I learned some bad habits and practices for sure.

  • @en2oh
    @en2oh 5 месяцев назад +2

    You need to invest in a muller 😉

  • @markuscamenzind5510
    @markuscamenzind5510 Год назад +3

    you picked one of the hardest shapes to do your first cast.
    unless you get it perfectly half and half you run the risk of breaking one side.

    • @badideametals
      @badideametals  Год назад

      Ya, that was a challenge. I have learned so much since. I may be doing a video soon of more casting.

  • @Metalstacker
    @Metalstacker 4 года назад +8

    Wow that was quiet the learning experience! Good to see you made your own sand and moulding box. Maybe your mixture of petrobond is not spot on yet? You could add some quarter inch ridges on the inside of the box, that way the sand will stick better. Great project and good results on the copper ball ✌🏻✌🏻

    • @badideametals
      @badideametals  4 года назад +1

      Hey thanks!! I am going to try some changes with the sand mixture. I wondered if the sand was not oiled enough causing it not to be so much like clay... or was there too much oil causing it to be too heavy... I will also be making other boxes too to see if I can improve results there too.

  • @juhavuorinen3945
    @juhavuorinen3945 5 месяцев назад +1

    Allways use screws if you have it

  • @paintballjla
    @paintballjla 5 месяцев назад +1

    This is painful to watch.....

  • @nocturnusbostok2636
    @nocturnusbostok2636 3 года назад +4

    Part of your problem may be the sand. Petrobond is more than just oil and sand, there is a clay in it as well. The formula I've seen is 100lbs fine sand, 5lbs bentone (not bentonite), 2lbs of oil, 1oz of alcohol. The oil and sand would bind together a bit but I think your mold falling out is due to the missing clay. At roughly $2/lb real petrobond isn't cheap, homemade is quite a bit cheaper.
    I haven't attempted a sand cast with copper but I hear it is more difficult than aluminum, so well done on the ball.

    • @badideametals
      @badideametals  3 года назад +2

      Hey thanks :) ... I have had more troubles off camera with this clay. Especially now that my outside temperatures have dropped to just about freezing. I would expect any oil based products would also react differently at high and low temperatures... this experiment will likely show more failed attempts then legitimate petrobond. I was hopeful, but I think reality is finally catching up. Once the oil is burned out, I may not recharge this material... but I will have to wait for warmer weather for such decisions. Thank you so much for commenting!

    • @coylkoupourbinbarger2941
      @coylkoupourbinbarger2941 Год назад

      this clay somehow no longer exists, its almost as if it never existed, not sure what happened but there is absolutely no place to purchase it in any quantity, finally managed to determine that its useful because it absorbs petroleum, however other clays that do the same thing cost more than just buying petrobond which is guaranteed to work much better than any diy alternative

  • @tonygagey
    @tonygagey Год назад +3

    I would highly recommend myfordboy! His series on home casting is outstanding!

    • @Gravattack
      @Gravattack 2 месяца назад

      I agree, he was the one who got me interested in casting

  • @tomrich1502
    @tomrich1502 3 года назад +3

    Your first set of boxes could be used just pre drill and use drywall screws I used the same type of wood no problem as long as you pre drill also you need alignment pins or wedges to keep things aligned

  • @Shakey31
    @Shakey31 17 дней назад

    My first pour was lead fishing sinkers. First 4 were poor but the last looked like i bought it! Excited to say the least. Great time!

    • @badideametals
      @badideametals  17 дней назад

      Awesome! My first pours of copper and aluminum were pretty much practice. I could not afford real sand, so for $7 I tried making my own :) which "worked" but there is no replacement for the real sand. Glad to hear your weights went well. What do you use for your cast materials?

  • @mishushat
    @mishushat 11 месяцев назад +2

    That was an interesting journey!🌟

  • @en2oh
    @en2oh 5 месяцев назад +1

    You might consider adding a bentone component to this(as in the real product

  • @philandrawis6232
    @philandrawis6232 10 месяцев назад

    using oil is not good because it burns and you also need to add clay to your mix as the bonding element and use water instead oil - oil is no good to do this

    • @badideametals
      @badideametals  10 месяцев назад

      Water is actually dangerous. Metal at 1700 F and above will turn the moisture directly into steam which can cause an explosive situation. It will cause hot metal to propel quickly away as the steam expands and escapes from the clay and sand.
      You are correct, the sand I have in this video is lacking the bonding clay. But the oil is actually what I wanted for this mix. Oil does not evaporate and expand at the temperatures we will be melting copper and aluminum at. Also, oil will burn off, instead of evaporate out. That is an expected behavior of the clay. This cutting oil is used to repair and recondition the sand for future use.
      I am open to how other people do things. I have seen first hand a few close calls with hot metal and expanding steam to know that water and a melting forge should not be too close… and that I need to keep my molds (graphite as well as sand) need to be as dry as possible.

  • @tomayrscotland6890
    @tomayrscotland6890 Год назад +1

    you have to use a wooden block to compress it into a hard form? But you will know that by now. you can also use sugar molasses as the indians do in india.

    • @badideametals
      @badideametals  Год назад

      Oooo sugar molasses :) that sounds sticky

  • @davidgard5288
    @davidgard5288 6 месяцев назад

    You are not packing the sand enough. Pound harder.

    • @badideametals
      @badideametals  6 месяцев назад

      :) That is sound advice. Thank you.

  • @court2379
    @court2379 2 года назад +1

    Few things.
    Add some pins and holes to your cope and drag. You don't want them shifting as you pull the off, and you usually need to put them back together after separating them.
    Put a rib of wood or something around the middle of the cope and drag. It will give the sand something to hold onto and be unlikely to slide out.
    Make a lock of some kind for your tongs. If that had slipped out it would have broken your crucible and thrown hot metal all over.
    Wear long pants and tall boots. Get a drop of splashed molten metal in your shoe and you will learn. Welders boots are the best as the tongue cover the laces so melt falls off, instead of in.
    Cast over dirt. Concrete it will splash more if you spill and can trap moisture under the metal and cause it to explode all over the place.
    Wear a face shield.
    I am guessing that adding some finer material like clay to your mix will help it hold together. It may make it harder for gases to escape though, so start with 10% and slowly go toward 20.

    • @badideametals
      @badideametals  2 года назад

      Ya, this was an early setup. I have a better rig now. More stable...
      And that is brilliant... I will need to put a rib in the box. I don't know how many times I dropped the sand as id did not have enough to hold onto ...
      I will make some changes. Thank you for your help :)

    • @court2379
      @court2379 2 года назад

      @@badideametals The rib is for the inside to give the sand something to hold onto and not shift, but one on the outside for you is good too. 😁

  • @conorharford5117
    @conorharford5117 3 года назад +1

    Fair play. good to see the petrobond working out. cant wait to do it myself . I have the devil forge just need to make up some tongs and get going

    • @badideametals
      @badideametals  3 года назад +1

      This was a fun thing making my own sand... I recently bought real petrobond and I am honestly not sure I will use my homemade stuff again ... check out my videos from February/March from this year to see the difference...

  • @roberthoward467
    @roberthoward467 3 года назад +1

    Thank you for showing a decent petrobond video. I have been having trouble with my bentonite/sand and for what I am doing casually this seems like a easy alternative

    • @badideametals
      @badideametals  3 года назад +1

      It works as a course grain and general mold... I have had more luck with the real petronond though... it is expensive, but the clarity is worth the price to me

    • @court2379
      @court2379 2 года назад +2

      @@badideametals Try to find a local foundry supply. Much of the cost is shipping, and they order it by the truck load so it is much less. Last quoted it, it was $70US for 50lbs.

    • @badideametals
      @badideametals  2 года назад +1

      @@court2379 thanks :) I will have to see what is around me.

    • @lenny108
      @lenny108 11 месяцев назад +1

      13:35 It is always important to have eye protection glasses when doing such work

  • @appatula
    @appatula Год назад

    Thread cutting oil recommendation is likely for its high temp cooling application.

  • @robertsunderland9196
    @robertsunderland9196 2 года назад

    Best sand casting video yet... looks like i better build a stronger box first,.

  • @LBCAndrew
    @LBCAndrew Год назад

    you need around 10-15% bentonite clay, finely ground.

  • @tobhomott
    @tobhomott 3 года назад

    Just came across your channel in my feed via this video. I see that you already bought some petrobond some time after posting this, so you probably already know that this mixture lacks the binder that makes real petrobond work so well. That binder is an organoclay, a type of chemically modified bentonite that absorbs oil instead of water. The lack of availability of organoclays in small quantities is really the only barrier that prevents hobbyists from being able to make their own high quality oil bonded molding sand. If you have contacts in oil drilling or paint manufacturing who can sneak you a bag of the stuff, it would definitely be worth looking up the recipe for K-bond sand and revisiting this! Any brand of organoclay should work.

    • @badideametals
      @badideametals  3 года назад

      Hey thanks !! I will try it again someday.

  • @joemalinak7410
    @joemalinak7410 2 года назад

    The sanding for smooth surfaces works but it looked like a lot of effort. I wonder if using a sand blaster would be an easier way to go?

    • @badideametals
      @badideametals  2 года назад

      It could :) I don’t have a sand blaster. But I could try that.

  • @danishproducts9010
    @danishproducts9010 2 года назад

    Not bad work dear.

  • @derrickdankwah2657
    @derrickdankwah2657 2 года назад

    wow

  • @pocatefo1
    @pocatefo1 2 года назад

    Super interesante tu video. Has ganando un nuevo suscriptor 👏

    • @badideametals
      @badideametals  2 года назад +1

      Gracias amigo :) ( yo hablo Portuguese, … Espanhol está similar, no?)

  • @rkb6783
    @rkb6783 2 месяца назад +1

    DON'T WATCH THIS !

    • @adhilde43
      @adhilde43 Месяц назад +2

      Why not ... besides, people will just have watched it so they would read your comment, so your warning will be too late.

  • @Cricket-lw6br
    @Cricket-lw6br 10 месяцев назад

    Mix in some fire clay with your sand.

  • @lenny108
    @lenny108 11 месяцев назад

    Nicely done! There are many videos suggesting that casting clay should be mixed with water. This is certainly wrong because the hot metal immediately turns the water into steam and the the whole explodes.

    • @badideametals
      @badideametals  11 месяцев назад

      That sounds very dangerous indeed.

    • @sdunca4864
      @sdunca4864 7 месяцев назад

      Please research greensand or at least understand the general history of casting before commenting...