Well were not really talking about casting RB here .
However since you brought it up . I shoot near 100 in a couple weeks . A box of hornady’s runs us near 14.00 here now. To me that’s totally un acceptable for the amount of shooting I do .
Also . Im sorry if in some way I insulted you . I wasn’t trying to do that . I just wanted to point out that doing your own castings isn’t as expensive as what many believe
But lets get back to the subject I alluded to in the other post
Lets say a TG costs 19-35 .00 .
As I said , if you only going to need 1 or 2 that’s one thing . But again we should remember that your buying someone else work and your locked into a given set of the more popular designs . Also your going to get what ever quality may be available .
Now lets say your building for a customer . Your going to pass that base cost +time and labor to clean the castings up on to the customer .
Now the base cost if you purchase a foundry kit . Will run you around 425.00 with shipping .
That kit provides everything you need . Furnace , copes , drags , crucibles green sand . The whole bit .
All you will need is a propane tank and to make your patterns.
one can also make thier own small foundry relitivly cheep .
You now can melt to liquid most everything right up to the temperature of cast iron .
So gold , silver , copper ……. Basically anything under a melting temp of 2300 deg , within around 20 minutes . With the right sand you can even get detail as fine as a thumb print . On top of that it basically takes no longer to case 10 of the same trigger guard then it takes to cast 1 .
Top that of ,the material is totally re usable . So if you do get a bad casting . Which can happens when your just starting out . You just put it back into the crucible and melt it back down
Now lets say you want yellow brass . NOT the red brass that so commonly sold . Not an issue . You can have all the yellow brass one needs with a shot trip out to an area where folks shoot a lot . Warning , just make sure you remove all the primers .
Or you can learn the process of making yellow brass . Or what the difference is between red and yellow brass .
Not to mention For the cost of one TG I can by enough yellow or red brass from the scrap yard to make 5 or 6 TG in one pour .
Now here is another Plus . Once you have made your wood pattern . You can cast that in any material you want . Pewter , silver , gold , German silver .
IE no more ,. Sorry we are out of stock or waiting months for the item to actually get to you . And because you have the actual pattern you always have part available to you .
Also unlike a ball mould . Your not locked into making a single item . You can make virtually anything you want . I have cast plaques for car clubs . Hard to find parts for tractors and antique cars , novelty items . Even trinkets and awards for clubs . My little foundry set up paid for itself in the first year .
Now that’s not to say its easy . Its not like casting lead . You have to learn how each different metal works . while lead my burn you if your stupid . Casting higher temp metal can kill you or put you in a wheel chair .
Where a drip of lead may give you a good burn and blister if it hits your skin . That same drip in brass will burn all the way to the bone before you can say “@#$%.. You have to keep your mind about you
Casting isn’t for everyone . But if a person is building a lot of a given piece or is needing unique pieces IMO its well worth the money spent . If the above case is what is needed , its very cost effective and opens up a whole new realm of possibilities as to what a person can do
Here is a link to the foundry set up I have .
The retailer also has other links on their web page showing what can be done
http://www.foundry101.com/ i own the model L fernace found here
http://www.foundry101.com/search.htm