I know of several people who have turned this fairly simple hobby into a profitable business (I'm not one of them - shame). But yes, it's possible and I love to encourage young talent to do its thing 😁
Hi Mark, there are companies out there that will cast your stuff for you. Might need to check castable resin suitability with the company you choose. Just something to consider before you invest a ton of money in kit.
I think I have watched all your individual how-to videos, but this one stop video with all your more budget discoveries of the last year is really useful!
Thank you for your work, it has been a great inspiration for me over the last few months. In my humble opinion, you are one of the best creators here on TH-cam, and believe me, I follow all the buggers. Soooo, I decided to lose my Patreon virginity with you and I am now officially your supporter number 59. Every little helps, or so I hope.
Thanks Alexander, I truly appreciate that. Your kind support really will help. I don't get the big views of other TH-camrs, so I basically run my channel at-cost. Well, maybe a bit less than that really 😁
This video reminds me of when I first started 3d animation... it felt like I could never get close to the people I admired the most. But here I am 20+ years later. Please keep up the awesome uploads. Super appreciative for your efforts. 🙏🏻🤓🤓🤓🍀🍀🍀🤜🏼🤛🏼🎅🏻😎
An outstanding, no-nonsense summary of the lost-wax process. I bought one of the melting furnaces VOG recommends, and took advantage of the VOG discount from the eBay seller. It's working like a charm. Many thanks, Geoff!
I landed here to see what a vacuum casting machine was about and was pleased to learn of that and so much more! Little gems like this are what make TH-cam so valuable. For giving of your time to educate (those cutaway diagrams did the trick!), I say thank you good sir! 🙏
Thank you for this brief introduction. I'd really like to test casting. I guess I should try to contact nearby artesans here in Finland to get best idea where to get some of the supplies.
I love how you talk about your previous budget law... that’s when you had me hooked. I still haven’t got to the stage of casting, but I just finished a custom set of badges for a 69 Firebird, that we built a stroker 454... so 505ci badges for the bonnet plus 505 Pontiac badge inserts for the rocker covers. I used Phrozen TR250 high temp resin on my sonic mine 4k. First ever resin printer. I’m using a special chrome paint system by ALSA called Easy Chrome. Stupid expensive but mind blowing at the same time. $200au for 50mls.
I have quite a few smaller flasks I use and a whole assortment of rubber sprue bases. A really cheap hack if you need a bigger flask is steel bean cans with both ends cut out. They only work for one or two castings, but they're basically free. 😉
Your videos have been a tremendous help in moving into metal casting. I’ve been doing other types of molding and casting for years, and making knives. But not much lost investment metal casting. I had a kiln lined up for burnout, but in typical internet-listing fashion, dude sold it out from under me. I know In a couple of the videos you’ve stated that a home oven can’t do an adequate burn out. For whatever it’s worth, I’ve had some success using the self-cleaning function. It gets close to 1000°F (980F/526.6C) and usually runs a few hours. Once it’s cooled, I’ll slowly heat it a while again in my furnace to ensure any residue has burned out. I know it’s not ideal and can stink to high heaven, it’s better than nothing
@@vogman i know it’s anecdotal and far less than ideal at best. Appreciate all the info you share, and know you’re far more experienced than me. Didn’t want me previous comment to come off like a typical internet know it all 😅
Wonderful! You put this together beautifully my friend. I want to start making all our own jewelry at home for my family & friends 😊 I want to make my fiancée and I our wedding rings ❤️❤️
One alternative to a ceramic kiln is to modify an old oven, lining the inside with refractory cement, removing the original heating element, and adding the components of a burnout kiln; the benefit is that you can use the bun warming drawer to house a pan partly filled with water to catch the initial outflow of melted wax so that it can be reused. Then you flip the mold and vaporized the remaining wax. The kiln we used at a bronze foundry was huge but operated much the same way, saving a ton of money.
Fantastic video....again.......I am still in the proces to change from sandcasting to vacuum casting......but the burnout cycle is the thing that stops me......it is not an easy job to do in my room at home. Thanks anyway for this informative video......i will help lots of people....
Thank you for your usefull information. At the moment i´am learning Rhino 6.0 for designing. Looking forward for the casting process working every day to use this purpose. Rose-Anne
another great video matey. sadly i don't think i will ever get around to setting anything up mostly due to space and setting up etc. but i still enjoy watching your videos matey.
Great video (as always), and great introductory tutorial! Curiously enough, the most difficult thing of all listed to acquire in my part of the world is the proper investment plaster. I already saw some other videos suggesting to mix sand on plaster of Paris to try and make it more suitable for casting, but even so the results are not optimal.
Sorry to hear that, Vinicius. You could try approaching jewellers that make there own jewellery and asking them if they use investment powder. If so, maybe they'd sell you a bag 😁
You should become a teacher at the Made-in-Wales school I'm thinking of opening at some point! damn Pandemic!) That was a great tutorial mate 👍👍👏 But one thing I find is the electric Furnaces are expensive to run if you are just doing as a hobby. Keep up the good work and I will see your hands in the next episode of VOG 👍⭐⭐⭐⭐
Thank you for sharing! I was walking by a catier shop yesterday and saw a £350,000 panther necklace and thought, with 3d resin printers and jewelry making knowledge, pavé setting etc, you could recreate that for close to nothing!
i'm a subscriber for a long time and still have one question: where does the melted out material (from the model and wax sprue) end up? at the bottom of furnace? somewhere else?
You make everything look so easy 😭 Do you need any specific set of skills to get good results like this? Or with the proper tools and machines, its pretty simple to just follow the exact instructions and come out with a good piece?
I've no formal training. I am no expert. I'm just an amateur that's having a go. So yes, as long as you have the right equipment and follow the procedures correctly, you should achieve reasonable results. This video may help too th-cam.com/video/fEsJlmY1H5I/w-d-xo.html
In my country casting resin is impossible, is there a way to remove it from the equation like print in normal resin then a silicon mold then wax? Would be AWESOME if you try this...thanks for all your work, you're making this art affordable for lots of us around the world with all the "alternative" tools!
It's indeed possible and makes a lot of sense for non one offs, it depends on the geometry of the part tho, some parts with a hollow inside (like voronoi geometries) will not work that way, for solid parts it's fine
You can print your mold in resin and inject wax into it or you can print your model take a vulcanized mold and then go through the wax injection process. which ever suites your 3d modeling and equipment.
You certainly can use an FDM. You can buy special filaments or try ordinary PLA. Have a look here. th-cam.com/video/qxj5eUkAFUI/w-d-xo.html - I have loads of videos on Lost PLA casting 😁
Do you ever have trouble with airbubble making pock marks on your castings ? I use a Rio grande table vacuum on my investment before letting it sit to dry though I tend to get little imperfections on most of my pours. Any suggestions? Thank you for your time and all the videos you make.
It's quite limited... there's a finite amount of metal you can apply to achieve crucible. Vacuum is far more flexible and has the advantage of not flinging molten metal at high speeds. So no, I haven't 😁
Hi, can you please tell me if there is an shop in the Uk where you can buy the ancient bronze casting grains,......i will order for 148 us dollar by RioGrande, but the total price incl shipping , vat etc...will be 348 dollar....i think maybe it's cheaper even after the Brexit in the UK, but i can't find the bronze casting grain.....Thanks for your help.
Can you reuse the wax that is melted out of the investment ? Also if you can what’s the best way to do this. I enjoy watching your videos and thanks for all the help. Rob
Thank you for sharing this I have been struggling to find a worker or shop doing this to start my small business in my country, however, I just decide to save up and start doing them by myself. Could you recommend to me a book for starting proficiently doing this so I be fully understanding what I am buying and doing. Thank you again.
What are your thoughts on centrifugal casting for home setups? That's what I'm used to from university. At the least I imagine it's a greater space investment, and may not save much as you still need a vacuum for degassing.
Centrifugal casting is fairly old school these days. There's nothing wrong with it, but personally I think it's been surpassed by vacuum systems. Centrifuges tend to be large machines, needing plenty of space, and spinning molten metal at high speeds is a scary idea. The vacuum system is more compact, better contained and perhaps easier to use. BUT this is just a preference. I will not criticise anyone for using the tools they prefer, especially if it gets them results 😁
I think I saw in one of your videos that during burnout you had to turn the cast around because wax needed to pour out, but the resin needed to escape as gas. Can you provide a link as to how you did this. Cheers.
There's no like but here's the info... start with the button down so the wax drips out of the bottom. Let the burnout cycle go past it's hottest point, then as it's reaching the lower temperatures, flip it 180 degrees to de-gas. Works like a charm.
We used an old pottery kiln with no modifications for burn out, but you do need to monitor the temperature so that it stays in the right range long enough to completely remove the original with out residue.
I walked away from sand casting a while ago. It's a real skill. Most folks can pull off a simple casting, but "detailed" work is something only the pros can manage. But investment casting is pretty easy in comparison. No need for years of experience 😁
After you've completed the burnout, how soon do you pour the metal in? I.e. can/should it be left to cool down, or does it need to be done right away? Thanks for the videos!
Pouring the hot metal into a cold mold will cause the mold to crack. You should have your mold preheated, and the temperature range that is OK will usually depend on the metal you are pouring into the mold.
Part of the program should be a cool down phase, bringing the flask tp a temperature suitable to pour. This varies depending on metal, size of the castings, sheer luck and lots of experience, but it should remain at this temperature for AT LEAST one hour before pouring.
It’s a real shame I live in South Australia where we have the most expensive electricity on earth. Ironically we have the most Sun on Earth, plus we have the largest battery on Earth... Thanks to Elon and Tesla batteries. Elon said to our state government, if I can build it in 100 days it will be free. I love the gall of people like Musk, that follow through with their impossible propositions. 🎅🏻🎅🏻🎅🏻🤓🤓🤓🤜🏼🤛🏼😎🍀🇦🇺😉😂
Holy shit, this is the most well-spoken and well-organized guide I've seen in a while. Thank you so much for producing this
That is awesome. Thank you for this. My son really wants to make his own rings and this gives me and him the info we need in one place.
I know of several people who have turned this fairly simple hobby into a profitable business (I'm not one of them - shame). But yes, it's possible and I love to encourage young talent to do its thing 😁
Hi Mark, there are companies out there that will cast your stuff for you. Might need to check castable resin suitability with the company you choose. Just something to consider before you invest a ton of money in kit.
I think I have watched all your individual how-to videos, but this one stop video with all your more budget discoveries of the last year is really useful!
Thanks Alex. I appreciate that 😁
Thank you for your work, it has been a great inspiration for me over the last few months. In my humble opinion, you are one of the best creators here on TH-cam, and believe me, I follow all the buggers. Soooo, I decided to lose my Patreon virginity with you and I am now officially your supporter number 59. Every little helps, or so I hope.
Thanks Alexander, I truly appreciate that. Your kind support really will help. I don't get the big views of other TH-camrs, so I basically run my channel at-cost. Well, maybe a bit less than that really 😁
This video reminds me of when I first started 3d animation... it felt like I could never get close to the people I admired the most. But here I am 20+ years later.
Please keep up the awesome uploads.
Super appreciative for your efforts.
🙏🏻🤓🤓🤓🍀🍀🍀🤜🏼🤛🏼🎅🏻😎
An outstanding, no-nonsense summary of the lost-wax process. I bought one of the melting furnaces VOG recommends, and took advantage of the VOG discount from the eBay seller. It's working like a charm. Many thanks, Geoff!
Great to hear! Thanks for the feedback Christian 😁
Where is the discount code?
Bro, everything I've bought has been a VOG recommendation. I'm loyal to VOG 😂 if he says buy Devil Forge, I say take my money 😂
I landed here to see what a vacuum casting machine was about and was pleased to learn of that and so much more! Little gems like this are what make TH-cam so valuable. For giving of your time to educate (those cutaway diagrams did the trick!), I say thank you good sir! 🙏
Wow this video is sooo appreciated, that list with all the equipment needed is heaven sent specially for newbies like myself, THANK YOU!
Glad to help 😁
Thank you for this brief introduction. I'd really like to test casting. I guess I should try to contact nearby artesans here in Finland to get best idea where to get some of the supplies.
It's an amazing hobby 😁
I love how you talk about your previous budget law... that’s when you had me hooked.
I still haven’t got to the stage of casting, but I just finished a custom set of badges for a 69 Firebird, that we built a stroker 454... so 505ci badges for the bonnet plus 505 Pontiac badge inserts for the rocker covers.
I used Phrozen TR250 high temp resin on my sonic mine 4k.
First ever resin printer.
I’m using a special chrome paint system by ALSA called Easy Chrome.
Stupid expensive but mind blowing at the same time.
$200au for 50mls.
I have quite a few smaller flasks I use and a whole assortment of rubber sprue bases. A really cheap hack if you need a bigger flask is steel bean cans with both ends cut out. They only work for one or two castings, but they're basically free. 😉
Thanks Bill 😁
Your videos have been a tremendous help in moving into metal casting.
I’ve been doing other types of molding and casting for years, and making knives. But not much lost investment metal casting.
I had a kiln lined up for burnout, but in typical internet-listing fashion, dude sold it out from under me.
I know In a couple of the videos you’ve stated that a home oven can’t do an adequate burn out. For whatever it’s worth, I’ve had some success using the self-cleaning function. It gets close to 1000°F (980F/526.6C) and usually runs a few hours. Once it’s cooled, I’ll slowly heat it a while again in my furnace to ensure any residue has burned out. I know it’s not ideal and can stink to high heaven, it’s better than nothing
Thanks for the share 😁
@@vogman i know it’s anecdotal and far less than ideal at best. Appreciate all the info you share, and know you’re far more experienced than me. Didn’t want me previous comment to come off like a typical internet know it all 😅
This has gone straight to my watch later list so i can find it easy
😁
A wide brush introduction. Well done! 👍
Many thanks!
Wonderful! You put this together beautifully my friend. I want to start making all our own jewelry at home for my family & friends 😊 I want to make my fiancée and I our wedding rings ❤️❤️
One alternative to a ceramic kiln is to modify an old oven, lining the inside with refractory cement, removing the original heating element, and adding the components of a burnout kiln; the benefit is that you can use the bun warming drawer to house a pan partly filled with water to catch the initial outflow of melted wax so that it can be reused. Then you flip the mold and vaporized the remaining wax. The kiln we used at a bronze foundry was huge but operated much the same way, saving a ton of money.
Great tip!
Fantastic video....again.......I am still in the proces to change from sandcasting to vacuum casting......but the burnout cycle is the thing that stops me......it is not an easy job to do in my room at home. Thanks anyway for this informative video......i will help lots of people....
Burnout takes a while... I usually run overnight. By the time I've had breakfast, it's normally ready for me to get started 😁
Thanks for a wonderful review Geoff here's wishing you all the very best mate
Thanks very much Ian. All the best to you and yours 😁
Thank you for your usefull information. At the moment i´am learning Rhino 6.0 for designing. Looking forward for the casting process working every day to use this purpose.
Rose-Anne
Never getting into metal casting but this is pretty dang cool.
It's not for everyone, but thanks 😁
Nicely presented, no questions you covered it all.
Many thanks 😁
another great video matey. sadly i don't think i will ever get around to setting anything up mostly due to space and setting up etc. but i still enjoy watching your videos matey.
I understand buddy. Space is essential when you're swinging a red hot crucible 😁
Many thanks for the thoroughly informative recap. Greatly appreciated.
Thanks John 😁
Good job, and so awesome lost Resin process video
Thank you! Cheers!
As usual, fantastic, accessible, concise and interesting content densely populated with useful information.
That's very kind. Thanks 😁
Great video Geoff!! A straightforward and succinct explanation of the lost wax/resin casting process. Well done again mate!
Great to hear from you Dan. Take care mate 😁
Brilliant! Thank you! Sharing this with my classmates. 😎
Please do! Shares really help 😁😁😁
Great video (as always), and great introductory tutorial! Curiously enough, the most difficult thing of all listed to acquire in my part of the world is the proper investment plaster. I already saw some other videos suggesting to mix sand on plaster of Paris to try and make it more suitable for casting, but even so the results are not optimal.
Sorry to hear that, Vinicius. You could try approaching jewellers that make there own jewellery and asking them if they use investment powder. If so, maybe they'd sell you a bag 😁
You should become a teacher at the Made-in-Wales school I'm thinking of opening at some point! damn Pandemic!) That was a great tutorial mate 👍👍👏 But one thing I find is the electric Furnaces are expensive to run if you are just doing as a hobby. Keep up the good work and I will see your hands in the next episode of VOG 👍⭐⭐⭐⭐
Electricity can be expensive, but it's fantastically controllable, so for an amateur like me it's great 😁
We love you VOG Guy!
Thanks Joe 😁😁😁
Nailed it again, enjoyed this vid thanks
Great Video as always!! Thanks for the information!!👍😁
No problem 👍
thank you for teaching us.
My pleasure 😁
Informative and detailed as usual
Glad you liked it 😁
Can you suggest any commercial burnout ovens? Something affordable that could do the job. What are the specs? Thanks!
Thank you for sharing! I was walking by a catier shop yesterday and saw a £350,000 panther necklace and thought, with 3d resin printers and jewelry making knowledge, pavé setting etc, you could recreate that for close to nothing!
Great video mate 👍
How many hours you leaving in the burner oven?
Could you use a 1500 F steak oven instead of a purpose built burnout oven? Amazon sells ones that should be able to hold the plaster for ~$200-300
Amazing vid! Thanks for sharing :)
Thanks for watching!
i'm a subscriber for a long time and still have one question: where does the melted out material (from the model and wax sprue) end up? at the bottom of furnace? somewhere else?
You make everything look so easy 😭 Do you need any specific set of skills to get good results like this? Or with the proper tools and machines, its pretty simple to just follow the exact instructions and come out with a good piece?
I've no formal training. I am no expert. I'm just an amateur that's having a go. So yes, as long as you have the right equipment and follow the procedures correctly, you should achieve reasonable results. This video may help too th-cam.com/video/fEsJlmY1H5I/w-d-xo.html
In my country casting resin is impossible, is there a way to remove it from the equation like print in normal resin then a silicon mold then wax? Would be AWESOME if you try this...thanks for all your work, you're making this art affordable for lots of us around the world with all the "alternative" tools!
That's totally possible. Pretty sure hes done this as well, using a giant syringe as a wax injector and boiling water to melt it all.
It's indeed possible and makes a lot of sense for non one offs, it depends on the geometry of the part tho, some parts with a hollow inside (like voronoi geometries) will not work that way, for solid parts it's fine
You can print your mold in resin and inject wax into it or you can print your model take a vulcanized mold and then go through the wax injection process. which ever suites your 3d modeling and equipment.
How thick is the trunk spew?
Hi, thanks for guidance. I got a ques, How much electricity does furnace comsume lets say per 10 hr burn cycle ?
Thank you!
You're welcome!
Great Video!
Why isn't it possible to use a filament 3d printer instead of resin?
You certainly can use an FDM. You can buy special filaments or try ordinary PLA. Have a look here. th-cam.com/video/qxj5eUkAFUI/w-d-xo.html - I have loads of videos on Lost PLA casting 😁
Do you ever have trouble with airbubble making pock marks on your castings ?
I use a Rio grande table vacuum on my investment before letting it sit to dry though I tend to get little imperfections on most of my pours. Any suggestions?
Thank you for your time and all the videos you make.
Have you ever experimented with spin casting?
It's quite limited... there's a finite amount of metal you can apply to achieve crucible. Vacuum is far more flexible and has the advantage of not flinging molten metal at high speeds. So no, I haven't 😁
very nice
Thanks Darren.
Hi, can you please tell me if there is an shop in the Uk where you can buy the ancient bronze casting grains,......i will order for 148 us dollar by RioGrande, but the total price incl shipping , vat etc...will be 348 dollar....i think maybe it's cheaper even after the Brexit in the UK, but i can't find the bronze casting grain.....Thanks for your help.
Can you reuse the wax that is melted out of the investment ? Also if you can what’s the best way to do this. I enjoy watching your videos and thanks for all the help.
Rob
I've heard people do, but you have to empty it from the flask during the initial burnout stage, filter it, then let it cool.
Can i get customized support from you about get good results with resin casting ? Let me know. Thanks
Thank you for sharing this I have been struggling to find a worker or shop doing this to start my small business in my country, however, I just decide to save up and start doing them by myself. Could you recommend to me a book for starting proficiently doing this so I be fully understanding what I am buying and doing. Thank you again.
I'm sorry no. I don't have a book to recommend. I picked it up as I went along and did my best to share my findings on my Channel here 😁
VOG But how did you learn all that have you been to school or been work in a shop before?
Hi Vog
How long can I keep a flask for after being burned out?
That was kind of a fun montage, seeing a bunch of old projects. Nicely done as always! How's Rezin? I bet he's huge by now.
What are your thoughts on centrifugal casting for home setups? That's what I'm used to from university. At the least I imagine it's a greater space investment, and may not save much as you still need a vacuum for degassing.
Centrifugal casting is fairly old school these days. There's nothing wrong with it, but personally I think it's been surpassed by vacuum systems. Centrifuges tend to be large machines, needing plenty of space, and spinning molten metal at high speeds is a scary idea. The vacuum system is more compact, better contained and perhaps easier to use. BUT this is just a preference. I will not criticise anyone for using the tools they prefer, especially if it gets them results 😁
Hello Mr VOG is their a water washable casting resin on the market? …I don’t like the idea of using alcohol.
Please let me know.
I haven't come across one, but that doesn't mean one doesn't exist 😁
Hi, great video. Question: Do you ever tried sand and plaster moulds? mixed together in a 50/50 ratio? Just saw a video and seems to give good results
I think I saw in one of your videos that during burnout you had to turn the cast around because wax needed to pour out, but the resin needed to escape as gas. Can you provide a link as to how you did this. Cheers.
There's no like but here's the info... start with the button down so the wax drips out of the bottom. Let the burnout cycle go past it's hottest point, then as it's reaching the lower temperatures, flip it 180 degrees to de-gas. Works like a charm.
@@vogman Top loading... is it hard to flip? a wee vid would be great.
You should do cast iron 😀
That's a little too hot for me 😁
@@vogman could you do a video explaining why cast iron is not an option 😀
Very informative video ! Question, could an old pottery kiln be converted to use as a burnout oven with only 120v 20a circuit as a power source ?
We used an old pottery kiln with no modifications for burn out, but you do need to monitor the temperature so that it stays in the right range long enough to completely remove the original with out residue.
Yes, absolutely as long as the programmer is up to the task.
Can you do a vid on petrobond cast quality vs plaster?
I walked away from sand casting a while ago. It's a real skill. Most folks can pull off a simple casting, but "detailed" work is something only the pros can manage. But investment casting is pretty easy in comparison. No need for years of experience 😁
After you've completed the burnout, how soon do you pour the metal in? I.e. can/should it be left to cool down, or does it need to be done right away? Thanks for the videos!
Pouring the hot metal into a cold mold will cause the mold to crack. You should have your mold preheated, and the temperature range that is OK will usually depend on the metal you are pouring into the mold.
Part of the program should be a cool down phase, bringing the flask tp a temperature suitable to pour. This varies depending on metal, size of the castings, sheer luck and lots of experience, but it should remain at this temperature for AT LEAST one hour before pouring.
I don't understand how the vacuum works if there are no channels in the plaster mold
The plaster is porous
I really need some extra space to do all of this
Space is important 😁
Hey, I got a notification this time! gg youtube. :)
Hooray! Nice one 😁
Lost resin? Casting guide
Sorta ya
It’s a real shame I live in South Australia where we have the most expensive electricity on earth.
Ironically we have the most Sun on Earth, plus we have the largest battery on Earth... Thanks to Elon and Tesla batteries.
Elon said to our state government, if I can build it in 100 days it will be free.
I love the gall of people like Musk, that follow through with their impossible propositions.
🎅🏻🎅🏻🎅🏻🤓🤓🤓🤜🏼🤛🏼😎🍀🇦🇺😉😂
First comment
Sorry buddy, a few others slipped in first. But your comment is still appreciated 😁
First
Sorry Joe, a few others slipped in first. But your comment is still appreciated 😁