lazersteve said:
In the past, I seem to remember you mentioning the use of cone molds also, can you expand on that a bit please.
Steve
They're not a luxury, Steve. They're mandatory. Just as assayers use them, so, too, would anyone running a furnace to recover materials that get fluxed. What they do is to stratify the materials in such a way that the values can be easily recovered from flux.
Please note, in the picture I posted, above, that the molds have been well blackened for use. Foundry supplies sell a mold blacking that can be brush applied. I recommend it highly. The material you'll recover from your waste will behave much like gold solder, and will stick to iron molds readily, even when they're somewhat rusty. The flux cover cleanses the surface adequately to permit adhesion.
While you can pour the charge to an ingot mold, it often quadruples the effort required to free the values from the flux cover because they spread as large as the mold allows, often yielding a thin layer of values, totally covered in flux. It doesn't always chip off easily.
By sharp contrast, a cone mold provides a minimum surface, which often allows the flux to cleave from the button with one hit of a hammer. Even if it tends to stick, the surface area is much reduced, and you don't risk having a multitude of small pieces of values spread throughout the flux.
Size of your mold would be dictated by the volume of your furnace. In my case, I needed two of them to empty the furnace, with the first one accepting only flux. The second one contained the values and a generous flux cover as well.
You must become familiar with sulfides, and how to recover values from them. The old trick of inserting some scrap steel (lengths of rebar, for example) while the charge is being reduced plays an important role in recovering all of the values, which are often tied up in the sulfide layer between the button and slag. This is one of the cases where you get full stratification when you melt and pour. The sulfide layer will resemble cast iron in color and texture. None should be discarded without melting with steel.
Harold