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2007-12-02 07:14:07 · 2 answers · asked by caLamaRi 2 in Arts & Humanities Visual Arts Sculpture

In layman's term please. Short and brief.

Perhaps tell me about how it could have been done centuries ago?

2007-12-03 04:07:27 · update #1

2 answers

A hole is created in a heat proof material and molten metal is poured in. The hole, besides having the shape of the result, has to have sprues to guide the metal to all parts of the hole and vents to let the air out.
The hole can be made in specially treated fine sand which is packed around a solid model, usually wood, so tightly that it can be lifted off. The parts of the sand mold are fitted together, perhaps with cores to make holes in the casting and the sprues and vents are carefully cut in the sand and the metal is poured in to the sand mold which is destroyed to get the part out.
The hole can be made by making a model in wax with added prues and vents, then pouring a special plaster like compound called investment around it. The cast investment is heated gradually, first to drain the wax out, then to burn out the mold, then to get it to casting temp. The molten metal is poured in and the investment washed off.
The hole can also be made with a wax model that is coated with a thin slurry of silica wash, then dusted with silica flour, dried and this is repeated until a strong layer has been built up. It is then heated to drain the wax and further heated to burn it out, then molten metal is poured in. Unlike investment, which is weak and needs to be contained, silica molds look like a fluffed out version of the model and are strong.
Large bronze statues are commonly made with a thin wax layer over clay, and covered with clay. The clay is heated to melt the wax out, then further heated and the metal poured into the narrow space so that only a thin shell if metal is needed instead of a solid body. Often they are made in sections and welded (braised) together and then cleaned up.
Almost all casting involves considerable cleanup work to cut off the sprues and vents and clean the seams and rough spots.
http://users.ticnet.com/mikefirth/castgobl.htm#LGGOBPROJ

2007-12-02 16:53:23 · answer #1 · answered by Mike1942f 7 · 0 1

confident, my suggestion to you is do not do it. and surely do not do it indoors. Linotype metallic is rather lead. Lead is poisonous to touch, lead produces poisonous fumes whilst heated. i assume in case you in ordinary terms do it often times it won't kill you, yet why could you employ something which you are going to be able to desire to in ordinary terms sell or maybe provide away for a contemporary with a warning label? seem into pewter or tin. And a heatgun isn't probable a great gadget for melting metallic. First you may evaluate what you opt for your end product to do. Do you in ordinary terms have the choose to make something ornamental? do you opt for something functional? do you have the choose to make rings? based on that learn what's the ideal cloth you need to use. you are going to be able to desire to look into invaluable metallic clays, that probably could provide you greater advantageous consequences. regularly, if something has an exceptionally low melting factor it is going to additionally soften once you do not opt for it to soften.

2016-10-10 02:13:45 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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