Hello and welcome - MetallurgyData is a self-funded project conducted in my spare time with one idea in mind... to produce free training videos of metallurgy, metal related projects and engineering.
I hope you will find some videos useful, others entertaining and of course please feel free to get involved with ideas and content that you would like to see.
Dude try pouring one leg at a time trying to chase all of the legs in Port all in that quickly did you see where it’s not working out well for you so again for one leg at a time let it cool you’ll have a lot more control over it and then do each leg separately you’ll have better control it’ll work a lot better good luck
Wow!!! Justed started a corporate office job in the Steel industry was previously in Automotive manufacturing..this video is amazing and got me up to speed...thank you so much!!! This is wonderful!!! I have it on repeat all day!!!
Hi, I'm a musician from County Durham in the UK. I'm creating a music video for a track I've written and wondered whether you'd allow me to use a few seconds from your brilliant video. I would credit you in the video end credits. I should add that I make no money from the music. Thanks John.
beautifull music choice. I I'll save this vid fot the future, it will take about a year or more to get all the stuff I'll need, but I'll get there. Thank you for the tutorial!
Brilliant - thank you! I live off grid so can't use a hair dryer but I guess heating the outside wih a Mapp gas torch would be good enough? Also, are there any setbacks to using charcoal vs sand/plaster or perlite? I have an abundance of sand and pine but that's about it!
Be VERY careful if you used a galvanised container, burning off the coating produces poisonous fumes that can kill, so burn off the coating in an open well ventilated area.
Electric Arc Furnace steels are not suitable for structural steel. And in the last few months to a year, the UK can no longer make structural steel because we no longer have blast furnaces, only electric arc funaces.
Well yeah. Tin is too soft and can't be processed to be tough, and it crumbles in cold temperatures. It's great for alloying with other metals, but it's kind of a crappy material on its own.
You never said what you used for your casting mold. What is it? I've used my portable fire pit to burn scraps & pieces of disposable wood and spring pruning off of the junipers and othe decorative wood in the yard. Got the fire so hot, i had to stand 20 ft away. Very good alternative. It also works great on windy days, you won't need the blow dryer. Liked the video.
Very informational. However, the music is louder than the speaker and extremely distracting. Why does there have to be repeating rhythmic music? We are forced to read the close captioning to appreciate what the narrator is saying because we are bombarded with music that is not in the background - it the main sound here.
First off all make sure u have enouth wood as you gone use so much wood to get the temp for alu as the wood will burn out fast rather use briquetes that will be so much better
2:24 I don't think a tin can is a good idea. Doesn't tin have a far lower melting point than aluminum (or aluminium, as you Brits say)? I think you meant a steel can.
Pretty clever and you can juggle as well, multi talented. You steel a lot of things from your poor wife, I hope you didn’t steel her underwear to make this video as well 😂
Awesome explanation 🙏🙏Also the grain boundaries rearrange them selves, when heat treated, relieving pressures and other stresses causing the metal to normalise
ru-vid.comg6yFmTTV43I?feature=shared Heat treatment, or heat treatment in English, is a process in which a material, usually a metal or metal alloy, is subjected to a controlled cycle of heating and cooling to change its physical and mechanical properties. This procedure is used to improve the hardness, strength, ductility, hardness, corrosion resistance and other characteristics of the material.