For all those wondering, I don’t do this for the value of ingots in money. I don’t sell them at all. It’s main purpose is the artwork that I make from them.
Thank you so much for posting this video, I like it when TH-cam puts good videos on my home section. Questions If you don't mind, A few Questions: if you were to sale the ignots vs taking cans to a recycle - would it be worth it? Considering the cost of your tanks - might you explain? Thank you!!
I used to work in an aluminum foundry. One mistake you make is pouring all the aluminum out of the ladle. Leave some in there, after you pour the two ingots, and the remaining will melt the incoming cans faster.
@@dr.vthomas1389 I don't think so, but someone might be willing to buy bars like this for more than the $0.50 cents you get per pound of scrap AL cans.
@@dr.vthomas1389 If you’re lucky they may give you a tiny bit more money, but it won’t be enough to cover the cost of running your furnace. And the scrap yard won’t pay you anything for all that hot sweaty work you did.
And then there's me just coming from a video recommended giving me the opportunity to watch 15 wild turkeys walking in a constant huge circle around a dead cat.
For those worried about the cost of melting- why would they do it to recycle them then. Just for fun. There's obviously a cost savings. This guy has a good time doing it. Why not let him.
I was using aluminum cans to make coins earlier today. They aren't worth anything but it's way to kill time and one day I may bury some in something that looks like a treasure chest just to prank somebody a thousand years in the future 😂
For everyone hating about such a waste he did, he turned 300 cans and a 1/4 bottle of propane with an hour of his time into cool conversation pieces and about $5,000 with the 2+ millions hits on TH-cam... What did you do in the last hour. I know you spent 10 minutes watching him make money...lol 🤣
Your video brought back a lot of memories. My father had an aluminum foundry from the time I was a few years old until my 20's. He smelted it from scrape and sold it to larger steel companies. Later he made a small table top portable BBQ grill out of aluminum and sold thousands and thousands of them. Although he did not as many, he also made ornamental aluminum house shutters He supported his family and made a good living doing so. I still have a couple of the BBQ grills in my attic and they still look brand new - not like the cheap ones that were made back in the 50's and '60's.
If I lived Intown add Neighbors on both sides of me and one behind me, I would be the neighbor that digs a hole in the backyard at 2 in the morning and drop several large trash bags in it. Just to screw with people's heads.
He finally got some good gloves. But he needs to get a face shield, flame retardant shirt, hat and pants. Then a heat shield apron . Equipment wise he should get a better set of thongs to handle the pot during pouring process. I would put a better coating of insulation around it and a vent pipe on top to release the heat further in and over hear to limit the heat reaching him and other things in the area. Safety cost a little more. But that cost is far lower then even a small burn. Many people have been scared for life during similar events.
Wow, I'm impressed! This reminds me of the bullet casting I do during the melting process to make lead ingots. In the summer of 1969, just before I volunteered for the Army, I worked in an aluminum casting foundry in Ft Lauderdale FL making transmission housings for dune buggies. Aside from the intense heat and black silica sand floating in the air I loved the whole process! Thank you for taking the time to make this video for us, sharing your creative problem solving, and it was just plain fun to watch! I "liked" and subscribed!
Hey fat mouth ppl like u are the reason why the3 letter alphabet boys changed our wheel widghts2plastic....haha jk there’s nothing u or I can do to stop it. TogetherWe Stand, DIVIDED WE FALL MEN. MELGibs0n 2nd movie bout ChristReturning....won’t b long till after that GOD BLESS
Brilliant video. Been wanting to try this for ages so I had my first "meltdown" last month. Used same method as yourself with an old propane bottle. Mostly kids coke cans and a few other bits i swiped from work. But i had great fun. i got just over 12lb of ingots. Took about 3 hrs. Got £75 from local metal recycler. Covered all my costs and bought some more coke for the kids !!!!
@@49ccMopedWorld £75 for 12lbs of aluminum?! I’m in the US and not seeing a single type of aluminum going for more than 1 USD/lb. Is there really that much if a gap between European prices 2 years ago and US prices now? Or am I getting something confused?
You inspired me to collect 30 lbs of copper, melted all the wiring off and it paid me off at $3.49 per pound. $100.00 for only 30 lbs of clean copper is far easier than aluminum cans. Thank you
I did something similar a few years ago. I used a cheapo bathroom fan with a dimmer switch to control airflow over charcoals and it worked great using an iron teapot as a crucible. Al is selling for < .60/lb so you don't get much if you're just recycling. Actually, if you're going to recycle these for money, this method will cost more than you will receive. Most average 12 oz beverage cans are approx 33 cans/lb and that includes paint and interior resin coating that burns off/gets separated from the Al. However, this is a great method to get somewhat clean Al for casting or for making parts/milling. I never did anything with them, there's still a 6 lb pile of mini aluminum cupcakes in my mom's garage.
If you want the material to have structural integrity you have to add degasing and grain refinement tablets, otherwise the material doesn't have much strength.
What’s the neighbor doing over there honey? Oh just burning all his beer cans before his wife gets home!! Damn she’ll be melting her wine bottles next week why can’t we have money to waste on propane like that!!😂😂
Yeah because when people go to all the trouble to make and post a video where millions of people will see it, it's not like they're expecting that anyone will have an opinion they don't like. (Sarc, of course) It's you tube. If you post something here expecting nothing but wonderful compliments you're an idiot who deserves mocking.
@@geofraz4594 That makes no sense. As far as I can tell, the author made no such statement. Yes, this is "you tube [sic]", where anonymity breeds courageous trolling.
I live in Michigan and each aluminum can here is worth 10 cents! I couldn't help thinking that it was $30+ in cans that could have purchased a few more packs of soda or beer by itself. Still, thank you for the video! Here's hoping your projects turn out well with the ingots!
There is something satisfying and therapeutic in this. I remember a "Leave It to Beaver" episode where Wally asked if Beaver wanted to go in the garage and crush cans.
This reminds me of making fishing weights back in the days when I had the time. We made small weights up to 8oz. Went by the neighborhood tire shop to pick up the lead.
In Michigan cans have a ten cent deposit (24 cans = $2.40) but it takes approximately 24 cans to equal 1 pound (1 lb aluminum scrap price = $0.35) so a deficit of $2.05 per case (24 cans/1lb) so this is definitely a hobby or art project while being an entertaining and informational/instructional video. Thanks for sharing and not being in it for financial gain only! Stay safe and avoid the fumes that lead to dementia and alzheimers
Couple things... First get you some fireman's gloves, their fireproof and perfect for messing with forges. Second you'll get better consistency by letting the ingots cool on a rack instead of quenching them... Quenching typically case hardens the metal making the outside harder than the center and causes internal stress, by air cooling you'll get a more consistent hardness throughout the material and better overall workability and quality
Bye Felicia 😂😂😂 classic man!!!! And to the naysayers: they are simply jealous that you utilize your time CONSTRUCTIVELY. Certainly melting down aluminum to simply sell off to the scrapper is a total waste of time and money but when you turn that aluminum into projects , machine shop work and so forth the value shoots WAY up. Afterall, blocks of aluminum are a dime a dozen but works of art……..PRICELESS.
The year - 2019, i have a sophisticated computer capable of complex calculations, i also have a high speed connection that can transmit mind boggling amounts of information in seconds, yet here i am on a Friday night watching some guy melt cans in a pot? 😂😂😅
This looks like fun.. Why comment crap on his video.. This is how he does it.. I watch others do it different.. No need for your comments if you can't respect the man on how he does things.. Ill subscribe thanks for posting this video..
Kevin that could a kid your talking to asshole. And if you had said that to mine in my face and not over the air-you’d be missing something after. Facts
Came here from BigStackD! Devil Forge products rock. I'm getting my first 10kg furnace and kit next month. Super excited to start melting and making my own jewelry molds!
Store it. Keep it prices will go up. Its awesome to have aluminum bars. I envy you sir. Very smart set up. Its easier to store bars than bags of cans. Very, very cool.
Gotta have the right protective gear to do that, aluminum melts at over 1300 degrees Fahrenheit. I worked at an aluminum foundry and getting burned by melted aluminum is more than just painful 😥
I also worked at a foundry and to see him in shorts and tennis shoes and no face shield is painfull. It only takes a small mishap to get even one small drop to burn trough his skin or catch clothing on fire. But cool to watch this video.
I work at an aluminum foundry. That has always been the least of my worries. My biggest worries is when it rains and I scoop up half a bucket of water and go to throw it in a furnace that has 10s of thousands of pounds of metal in it. Honestly, it's very exhilarating and I love it somewhat lol
We had a aluminum foundry operation for manufacturing OEM, aftermarket and Carter Fuel pumps, the first 4th of July holiday, management never considered that shutting off all of the exhaust fans might trigger the overhead, water fire suppressors... A huge vat of molten aluminum does not react nicely with cold water! lol
Always so great watching stuff melt, so soothing. I wish I only had 300 cans to melt, I bet I have close to 15K EWWW, that's a lot of melting lol. maybe this winter.
Would be nice if you listed in the description all of the equipment used, the costs of it, when applicable, and links to where you bought items you had to purchase. Thank you for considering doing this in your future.
From my experiences and from what I have seen in the video the can crusher only crushes each can so far. With a mallet or just stepping on them will flatten them even more. So my question is would it have been more effective to have used them if they were more flattened? Obviously the answer is yes when it comes to fitting more into a single box for storage and before melting but would it be more efficient for the forge part of it?
I use Blue Rhino when I need a new tank with a new date stamp. But they only give you 15 pounds of propane in a 20 pound tank, so your propane is costing you 25% more than a refill at the same price. (But then again, most refills are cheaper than that) The good thing is that you can turn in an out of date tank for one with a fresh stamp and refill it for years.
I've watched this countless times.... I'm doing it. As an alcoholic... Got the cans, got ample time, and the need for extreme heat and compressed gas. I think this will be a great hobby to spark my path to recovery.
TomDenney Art as he said, he does it for materials for his artwork. It’s significantly less expensive doing this than buying aluminum stock to melt down and the cleaned ingots are easier to work as he needs them I’m sure.
@@obijuankenobi6565 nah, been there done that, it's not for me. I haven't tried getting drunk yet though, would that in any way enhance the movie experience?
This is awesome!!! Would love to know how you made the DIY propane crucible, mold and some of the materials that you used. Planning on building something like it
Everyone with the negative comments, explain to me how you got any metal Before you could buy it...I'm waiting. Oh that's right. Someone has to mine it, then process it, melting to shape it and then you get it in a store. This guy is just showing how. 🤦♀️
@Hamish Munroe 😅 and what are the cans made out of? Aluminum ore that someone mined out of stone. This guy converts that metal back to its original state and reuses it to make other things. 🤦♀️
@Nikola Tesla are they for you? Well they aren't for everyone in the U.S. this guy has a hobby, others used to scrap to support their families. Now, even metal recycling isn't a sustainable business.
Is there any advantage to quenching them in water instead of oil? I would think oil would be the better choice to ensure more uniform cooling for a closer and stronger grain structure.
Even when forging steel you can achieve a tight grain structure with water. You need to ensure when you quench, that the metal is in its optimal temperature. Oil is just easier to use.
6 pounds of raw aluminum: about $85 10-15 gallons of propane: $30-$45 Inhaling super toxic aluminum fumes, inks, glues used for attaching the tops and bottoms of the can, BPA varnish used for can liner: priceless! A good video at the end of day and he did say he’s not doing it for the money. Otherwise totally not worth the risk.
Make one in a mound of dirt where nothing can catch fire. Make a hole with line it with bricks, make sure you have holes for bellowing air. Fuel the forge with charcoal (using an air gun from an air compressor)
these fuelcan foundries are cool and all, but when I build one I really wanna make it larger than just a little can... maybe do something with an old boiler tank - have a proper crucible shifting and pouring rig supported from the ceiling, etc...
pewpew pickle well in this case time is money. The worth of each can for recycling is 5 cents in most states. So for all those cans the process of crushing them takes....TIME... and then to routinely pick one up and place it in the furnace takes...TIME... and currently the value of can aluminum per pound is remarkably low possibly 3 dollars im not sure. So....in conclusion the process possibly took him an hour plus. The value of 5 pounds of aluminum im sure isnt more than 10 bucks. Pretty much he cant ever make a living or a hustle out of this for his time. But as a hobby its pretty cool. Hobbies usually cost money anyways so this is kind of an inexpensive hobby.
@@pewpewpickl I think that in America, when you return a can they give you like 5p or something. They don't have that in the uk, which is why cans are all over the place.
I'm just impressed about the amount of beer cans in there haha. It's also really satisfying watching the video seeing trash turned into something usable again.
Just an FYI for you and others that need aluminum somewhat in bulk like that, check with your local garage door companies as the drums and spring plugs used in the torsion systems are cast aluminum. When doors are “retrofitted” (replaced) all the metal is usually thrown in roll off dumpsters for metal scrap. The cast aluminum goes in with the ferrous (such a waste). Depending on how busy the door company stays you should be able to easily fill a couple 55 gallon drums a month. (I did for years)
How much time did the melting, casting and cooling take? What portion of a tank of propane was used? How much larger setup is feasible to run on that size burner and propane tank? Thank you.
From the description "Today I'll be melting about 300 aluminum cans at home in my backyard foundry. I have been saving these beer and soda cans from some time and I'll turn them into big pure aluminum ingots. This is a very simple DIY project that anyone can do with the proper tools. The whole melting process took about an hour and used a quarter tank of propane."
He could have just returned them for 10 cents each. He would have got 30 bucks in Michigan and not paid for propane. Could have got a case of good beer and a pizza.
Easy, yes. Dangerous? DEFINITELY. I would like to put an extra emphasis on the term "with the proper tools" since this man is using the proper tools (except the first gloves that burnt out). Good job!
Dangerous isn't the word to describe it. Its VERY dangerous. Molten metal or slag with any form of moisture is like a bomb. When water gets around molten metal, it's basically a bomb. Granted a little amount isn't bad but in the thousands if pounds amount, it is like an IED bomb. Water on top is okay but if water gets trapped under the metal it goes boom
Quick question... why salt as flux instead of Borax? I have not cast aluminum before ( ironically I used to return cans for the deposit to afford the copper, brass, and silver that I did cast ) but I had the best results with Borax as flux and a graphite rod for the slag. Love the video.
This is so cool! I love those sculptures they make by pouring aluminum in an anthill and I’d love to have one but they are way overpriced for me! This way I could make my own!
Yeah, not just the money, but the idea of recycling and using gas to do it with. Like all these electric cars, yet the process to make them, the batteries and charging the batteries just isn't worth it.
Yes, the gas used to melt would not be cost effective but, since he is melting them into bars for art projects it is much less expensive for him to get this much metal vs. an art or jewelry supplier!
1 pound is worth ~45 cents in price of scrap (remember it does fluctuate). 30 cans (before slag and impurities) makes a pound. You can decide if all that is worth the 1.5 cents per can.
Liked and subbed :) Recently got my Vevor 12kg melter, rigidised it, waited 5 days to dry, today i put the refractory cement on and that'll be dry in another day. I was jealous of your lovely new devil forge in your other video with its nice smooth pre-cemented surface :)
For all those wondering, I don’t do this for the value of ingots in money. I don’t sell them at all. It’s main purpose is the artwork that I make from them.
Beautiful Inspiring work
Thank you so much for posting this video, I like it when TH-cam puts good videos on my home section.
Questions If you don't mind, A few Questions:
if you were to sale the ignots vs taking cans to a recycle - would it be worth it? Considering the cost of your tanks - might you explain?
Thank you!!
I was gonna ask how it was recycling If you just melted them and did nothing with them. Really rad though bro
But whats the price for such an amount? 5,7 pounds..
Greetings from Denmark
Ok but it cool doing it like that
Having to crush all those cans looks like it would be soda pressing.
Damn...
Ha!
Sons of Abraham RT 😂😂😂😂
Finally a joke thats actually funny 😂😂😂
Sons of Abraham RT- 😂
I used to work in an aluminum foundry. One mistake you make is pouring all the aluminum out of the ladle. Leave some in there, after you pour the two ingots, and the remaining will melt the incoming cans faster.
that is what I thought too.
Will I get more money with the pure metal at a scrap yard
@@dr.vthomas1389 would depend on the price of alum, I was thinking the same thing.
@@dr.vthomas1389 I don't think so, but someone might be willing to buy bars like this for more than the $0.50 cents you get per pound of scrap AL cans.
@@dr.vthomas1389
If you’re lucky they may give you a tiny bit more money, but it won’t be enough to cover the cost of running your furnace. And the scrap yard won’t pay you anything for all that hot sweaty work you did.
Damn you, TH-cam algorhythm! I didn't even know I cared about melting aluminum until now!
And then there's me just coming from a video recommended giving me the opportunity to watch 15 wild turkeys walking in a constant huge circle around a dead cat.
yeah....I was looking for videos on how to make my penis bigger.
Lol
I was learning how to make an Xbox 360 into a xbox One... This is a way better video ☺️
I laughed so you get a thumbs up and comment for me.
For those worried about the cost of melting- why would they do it to recycle them then. Just for fun. There's obviously a cost savings. This guy has a good time doing it. Why not let him.
Apparently he uses it for art he makes. So yeah, not really for any kinda resale value and more so to gather and organize materials for reuse later.
It take 5% the amount of energy to recycle a can then to create a can so is alot cheaper to recycle for big companies
I was using aluminum cans to make coins earlier today. They aren't worth anything but it's way to kill time and one day I may bury some in something that looks like a treasure chest just to prank somebody a thousand years in the future 😂
Economies of scale have entered the chat
For everyone hating about such a waste he did, he turned 300 cans and a 1/4 bottle of propane with an hour of his time into cool conversation pieces and about $5,000 with the 2+ millions hits on TH-cam... What did you do in the last hour. I know you spent 10 minutes watching him make money...lol 🤣
Thank you for saying it for me! 👍🏻 email me and I will send you a special gift
Never truer words spoke..uhhhh written!
@Worthvilleminimart Well said, PS im posting this and its at 3.478 million views lol
Does one really get that much money off TH-cam for 2M views?
@@RobertFullStop 2 million views is no joke... It takes allot to get that high.... Most videos only hits a few 100 thousands at best
Your video brought back a lot of memories. My father had an aluminum foundry from the time I was a few years old until my 20's. He smelted it from scrape and sold it to larger steel companies. Later he made a small table top portable BBQ grill out of aluminum and sold thousands and thousands of them. Although he did not as many, he also made ornamental aluminum house shutters He supported his family and made a good living doing so. I still have a couple of the BBQ grills in my attic and they still look brand new - not like the cheap ones that were made back in the 50's and '60's.
You're the cool neighbor everyone watches from their windows. " what's he doing now"?
If I lived Intown add Neighbors on both sides of me and one behind me, I would be the neighbor that digs a hole in the backyard at 2 in the morning and drop several large trash bags in it. Just to screw with people's heads.
"Hey Wilson"... "Howdy Ho, Tim!"
He was in the movie The Burbs, jk. That one neighbor........
Or on TH-cam 😂👍🏼
@russellpearce3749 😂
"Its hot." The best, calmest, and most real comment I've ever heard from working around fire and metal...
this is all just a huge cover story.. hes doing it to destroy the evidence of how much bud light he drinks before his lady finds out …
I'd do the same thing if I drank that trash beer...lol
Deep down I think she's always known he was gay
Jon Fortier good one! Can u melt champagne bottles? Ah...never mind. He buys all of them anyway🤗🤠
I drink Bud Lite to sober up,,,, lol ! 😁
@Sang Man 😂😂😂
"...so always use precaution and protective gear when melting metal." Those must be some heavy duty shorts and socks you are wearing.
He finally got some good gloves. But he needs to get a face shield, flame retardant shirt, hat and pants. Then a heat shield apron . Equipment wise he should get a better set of thongs to handle the pot during pouring process. I would put a better coating of insulation around it and a vent pipe on top to release the heat further in and over hear to limit the heat reaching him and other things in the area. Safety cost a little more. But that cost is far lower then even a small burn. Many people have been scared for life during similar events.
Lol!
@@thomasbergeron5166 i feel like it would melt through bone
And if there's any liquid in the cans it would rapidly expand sending aluminium everywhere
Do as I say, not as I do.
Wow, I'm impressed! This reminds me of the bullet casting I do during the melting process to make lead ingots. In the summer of 1969, just before I volunteered for the Army, I worked in an aluminum casting foundry in Ft Lauderdale FL making transmission housings for dune buggies. Aside from the intense heat and black silica sand floating in the air I loved the whole process! Thank you for taking the time to make this video for us, sharing your creative problem solving, and it was just plain fun to watch!
I "liked" and subscribed!
Where do you grab your lead from, the range or wheel weights?
Hey fat mouth ppl like u are the reason why the3 letter alphabet boys changed our wheel widghts2plastic....haha jk there’s nothing u or I can do to stop it. TogetherWe Stand, DIVIDED WE FALL MEN. MELGibs0n 2nd movie bout ChristReturning....won’t b long till after that GOD BLESS
Our wheel wiegyts are plastic now. Yippy!!! C0ckS4ck3rs FREEDOM AINT FREE BUT TYRANNY SURE IS!!!
You were in Army in 1969. You were in war.
I can't decide if your hobby is melting cans or drinking beer.
Er will Thermit herstellen.
Greetings from a creepy german guy
Why not both?
Lolololol
.ahhhhhhh...lol..you noticed that too huh?..
Lol.
Awe damn...you hit that on the head...still laffin ‼️
ExtraDork I hope not at the same time
First one requires the second one!
Brilliant video. Been wanting to try this for ages so I had my first "meltdown" last month. Used same method as yourself with an old propane bottle. Mostly kids coke cans and a few other bits i swiped from work. But i had great fun. i got just over 12lb of ingots. Took about 3 hrs. Got £75 from local metal recycler. Covered all my costs and bought some more coke for the kids !!!!
You bought coke for your kids ? Shame on you hahaha
@@49ccMopedWorld £75 for 12lbs of aluminum?! I’m in the US and not seeing a single type of aluminum going for more than 1 USD/lb. Is there really that much if a gap between European prices 2 years ago and US prices now? Or am I getting something confused?
Never days!! I think hes just making conversation
Nah m8 ally is between 60p and a quid max a kilo so I'm confused or I want the number for the scrappy u weigh in at
At least it's more waste kept out of landfills and it'll be used again
Thanks for the video! I wanted to show my 5-year-old a quick example of metal moving from solid to liquid state and back, this was perfect.
You inspired me to collect 30 lbs of copper, melted all the wiring off and it paid me off at $3.49 per pound.
$100.00 for only 30 lbs of clean copper is far easier than aluminum cans.
Thank you
@N Kelly I can either choose to strip the copper or burn the plastic all off...or turn it in dirty. More money turning it in clean.
Yeah, copper is much harder to come by.
Who else didn't search for this video but ended up watching it
Aahhh, TH-cam, here we go again.
guilty as charged. I have a lot of cans.
Holy fuck yes what is up with the algorithms? Let me guess, you were looking at conspiracy theory stuff??
Algorithms r life
😆 i know right.
I did something similar a few years ago. I used a cheapo bathroom fan with a dimmer switch to control airflow over charcoals and it worked great using an iron teapot as a crucible. Al is selling for < .60/lb so you don't get much if you're just recycling. Actually, if you're going to recycle these for money, this method will cost more than you will receive. Most average 12 oz beverage cans are approx 33 cans/lb and that includes paint and interior resin coating that burns off/gets separated from the Al. However, this is a great method to get somewhat clean Al for casting or for making parts/milling. I never did anything with them, there's still a 6 lb pile of mini aluminum cupcakes in my mom's garage.
If you want the material to have structural integrity you have to add degasing and grain refinement tablets, otherwise the material doesn't have much strength.
I didn’t realize that watching someone melt aluminum would be so much fun!
What’s the neighbor doing over there honey? Oh just burning all his beer cans before his wife gets home!! Damn she’ll be melting her wine bottles next week why can’t we have money to waste on propane like that!!😂😂
😂😂😂😂😂😂
20 Years ago: That weird guy who melts stuff in his backyard
These days: A successful TH-camr
TH-cam money is getting weaker by the day. Soon he'll be worse off than 20 years ago. lol jk
And 20 years from now.....that guy with altzhiemers......
@B Sadi 4 months later...40k subscribers and over 3 1/2 million views. It looks like it's coming along.
Funny how people can find something negative to say about a man pouring aluminum and not bothering anything/nothing
Yeah, sad. But criticize(e.g.) the gay agenda or police corruption and people are all over you. Foh!
If he's not bothering nothing then he's bothering something.
@@rggyuhtgggbji5017 Assert a gay agenda exists...
Yeah because when people go to all the trouble to make and post a video where millions of people will see it, it's not like they're expecting that anyone will have an opinion they don't like. (Sarc, of course)
It's you tube. If you post something here expecting nothing but wonderful compliments you're an idiot who deserves mocking.
@@geofraz4594 That makes no sense. As far as I can tell, the author made no such statement. Yes, this is "you tube [sic]", where anonymity breeds courageous trolling.
Don't know why but this is very relaxing to watch....
phew i thought i was the only one drinking 3 garbage bags full of bud light
Knew a guy who called them his savings account, he had huge garbage bags of them in the yard for the nickel deposit
Lol for me it's 25.4 oil cans of fosters. Maybe I should start making ingots out of them.
I live in Michigan and each aluminum can here is worth 10 cents! I couldn't help thinking that it was $30+ in cans that could have purchased a few more packs of soda or beer by itself. Still, thank you for the video! Here's hoping your projects turn out well with the ingots!
Wow, it's only 5 cents in Massachusetts.
@@tonyprice2256 it's zero in most states
I could watch these types videos all day! There's something oddly facinating about molten metals and alloys.. Thank you for sharing this with us.. ☺
There is something satisfying and therapeutic in this. I remember a "Leave It to Beaver" episode where Wally asked if Beaver wanted to go in the garage and crush cans.
This reminds me of making fishing weights back in the days when I had the time. We made small weights up to 8oz. Went by the neighborhood tire shop to pick up the lead.
grt story.....
Me and my friends found a furnace in our street during council cleanup we took it and made daggers after watching videos tirelessly
Badass...
I kinda want to paint them gold and pretend i'm rich.
Josh, your comment is the one that is the most stupid of all.
@Josh Robinson ok
@Josh Robinson You are infinite Love
@Joshua Robinson you are an evil heartless piece of trash. You must be a cop.
I am watching this just in case during the zombie apocolypse I need to make aluminum ingots.
Make crafting table first
For a weapon or a silencer?
@@genericchannel671 Ammo!!
@@mocap69 there's aluminum ammo? The only thing I'd use to shoot aluminum is a sling or a slingshot. Maybe a bow
drill a hole put a wood handle and smash smash the hell outta that zombie head
In Michigan cans have a ten cent deposit (24 cans = $2.40) but it takes approximately 24 cans to equal 1 pound (1 lb aluminum scrap price = $0.35) so a deficit of $2.05 per case (24 cans/1lb) so this is definitely a hobby or art project while being an entertaining and informational/instructional video. Thanks for sharing and not being in it for financial gain only! Stay safe and avoid the fumes that lead to dementia and alzheimers
You pay taxes on those deposits. Maybe some states don't have those. So it might be less of a deficit
After watching this, I've come to the conclusion the word "easy" in your title is extremely subjective :)
Couple things... First get you some fireman's gloves, their fireproof and perfect for messing with forges. Second you'll get better consistency by letting the ingots cool on a rack instead of quenching them... Quenching typically case hardens the metal making the outside harder than the center and causes internal stress, by air cooling you'll get a more consistent hardness throughout the material and better overall workability and quality
Doesnt matter here since they are for remelting.
@Von Musklaus metal finishing is a fun career and guess what videos we like to watch XD
Adam Haynes how can you forge it so it reacts and oxidizes the fastest?
@Von Musklaus erm,why is there always one....because there is always a bigger fish
OMG, I started out watching repair videos for my Ram and ended up here? I won't lie, still watching... but I totally forgot about my truck.
Can't even remember what I was looking for initially. For sure not even the same ballpark.
Don't worry, we won't tell her
Lol that last bag you noticed when you put the empty box n bag away. The zoom said it all. Haha! 🤣
Don`t miss his next artwork video. What he does with that $4.00 can of gold spray paint is amazing!
🔥 this was hypnotizing and relaxing 😌 especially to the point were my daughter was in a deep stare watching that when he talked she jumped 😂🤣
It's going to take lots and lots of Bud Light to get this process started I'm excited
Honey I'm not an alcoholic, I'm saving the environment! ;-)
Bye Felicia 😂😂😂 classic man!!!!
And to the naysayers: they are simply jealous that you utilize your time CONSTRUCTIVELY. Certainly melting down aluminum to simply sell off to the scrapper is a total waste of time and money but when you turn that aluminum into projects , machine shop work and so forth the value shoots WAY up.
Afterall, blocks of aluminum are a dime a dozen but works of art……..PRICELESS.
The naysayers are simply unintelligent, you however are smartest!
The year - 2019, i have a sophisticated computer capable of complex calculations, i also have a high speed connection that can transmit mind boggling amounts of information in seconds, yet here i am on a Friday night watching some guy melt cans in a pot? 😂😂😅
DJ SHaKa
Coulda been worse :
I ended up watching a guy smoking pot on the can...
You described my speechless feelings.
It's an anomaly in the space-time continuum.
r/iamverysmart
Saturday night 4 am Sunday morning :/ ripped a fuck fat as fuck
This looks like fun.. Why comment crap on his video.. This is how he does it.. I watch others do it different.. No need for your comments if you can't respect the man on how he does things.. Ill subscribe thanks for posting this video..
Kevin that could a kid your talking to asshole. And if you had said that to mine in my face and not over the air-you’d be missing something after. Facts
over two million views, just shows how many folks are into melting aluminum.
Came here from BigStackD! Devil Forge products rock. I'm getting my first 10kg furnace and kit next month. Super excited to start melting and making my own jewelry molds!
Cool hobby understand the value of your own aluminum source ...your spot on the process...like your forge!!! Thanks for sharing 😎
Store it. Keep it prices will go up. Its awesome to have aluminum bars. I envy you sir. Very smart set up. Its easier to store bars than bags of cans. Very, very cool.
Gotta have the right protective gear to do that, aluminum melts at over 1300 degrees Fahrenheit. I worked at an aluminum foundry and getting burned by melted aluminum is more than just painful 😥
I also worked at a foundry and to see him in shorts and tennis shoes and no face shield is painfull. It only takes a small mishap to get even one small drop to burn trough his skin or catch clothing on fire. But cool to watch this video.
How much you think those bars are worth Thero?
I work at an aluminum foundry. That has always been the least of my worries. My biggest worries is when it rains and I scoop up half a bucket of water and go to throw it in a furnace that has 10s of thousands of pounds of metal in it. Honestly, it's very exhilarating and I love it somewhat lol
Dude I'm so addicted to these videos... I'm buying a U.S.A. Cast Masters furnace on Monday. I can't wait.
The best part beside watching those cans melt was the "bye felicia!" 😄👌
We had a aluminum foundry operation for manufacturing OEM, aftermarket and Carter Fuel pumps, the first 4th of July holiday, management never considered that shutting off all of the exhaust fans might trigger the overhead, water fire suppressors... A huge vat of molten aluminum does not react nicely with cold water! lol
Always so great watching stuff melt, so soothing. I wish I only had 300 cans to melt, I bet I have close to 15K EWWW, that's a lot of melting lol. maybe this winter.
Haha yeah that’s a lot.. that’s why I try and melt mine little by little so I don’t have that many at once 👍🏻
Would be nice if you listed in the description all of the equipment used, the costs of it, when applicable, and links to where you bought items you had to purchase. Thank you for considering doing this in your future.
From my experiences and from what I have seen in the video the can crusher only crushes each can so far. With a mallet or just stepping on them will flatten them even more.
So my question is would it have been more effective to have used them if they were more flattened? Obviously the answer is yes when it comes to fitting more into a single box for storage and before melting but would it be more efficient for the forge part of it?
Forget the art, just paint them gold and sell them. Art done!
I use Blue Rhino when I need a new tank with a new date stamp. But they only give you 15 pounds of propane in a 20 pound tank, so your propane is costing you 25% more than a refill at the same price. (But then again, most refills are cheaper than that) The good thing is that you can turn in an out of date tank for one with a fresh stamp and refill it for years.
Just made my first dozen muffin ingots. It's all about what kind of charcoal your using. Thanks for the DIY video bruh!
I wish I had friends like this growing up.. ah well I'll move to Phoenix, AZ.
Thank you for getting back to me,I know the pain, of loosing someone close.thanks again.. from keV the punk Rocker
As an avid fan of the likes of CodysLab and NileRed, the only thing I took away from this video is that this guy drinks a looooot of Bud. Lol.
I've watched this countless times.... I'm doing it. As an alcoholic... Got the cans, got ample time, and the need for extreme heat and compressed gas. I think this will be a great hobby to spark my path to recovery.
the poor two molds that were't used in making this video :(
@Log Splitta 👆 I see what you did there, lol
Haha! I thought the same thing!
@Log Splitta pour my heart out
What about it....
I think the propane is more expensive than the recycled value of aluminum
I recycle mine at .10 cent a piece
TomDenney Art as he said, he does it for materials for his artwork. It’s significantly less expensive doing this than buying aluminum stock to melt down and the cleaned ingots are easier to work as he needs them I’m sure.
Lol when you live in states that make you pay 5 c or 10 c can and take them back you’re not really making money sigh
@@Justme42yay but its not me buying the can soooo
I thought so
This was quite a satisfying video and that "Bye Felicia" line at the end had me dying of laughter LOL
Lol, probably his ex's name
@@crweirdo8961 No, it's a line from the movie "Friday" With Ice cube and Chris Tucker.
@@toolshopguy2080 Huh, I'll have to add it to my list of movies to watch, thanks.
@@crweirdo8961 You've never seen "Friday" ??????!!!!!!!!! Smoke some weed first.
@@obijuankenobi6565 nah, been there done that, it's not for me.
I haven't tried getting drunk yet though, would that in any way enhance the movie experience?
This is awesome!!! Would love to know how you made the DIY propane crucible, mold and some of the materials that you used. Planning on building something like it
Do you wear a respirator when you do this?
Does it release crazy fumes?
Sweet forge 👍
Everyone with the negative comments, explain to me how you got any metal Before you could buy it...I'm waiting. Oh that's right. Someone has to mine it, then process it, melting to shape it and then you get it in a store. This guy is just showing how. 🤦♀️
@Nikola Tesla At least, I know how to milk a cow.
Ok, positive comment here. Thanks god I don't have to do it, and this is positive.
@Hamish Munroe 😅 and what are the cans made out of? Aluminum ore that someone mined out of stone. This guy converts that metal back to its original state and reuses it to make other things. 🤦♀️
@@theodorekell thankfully none of us do. For now.
@Nikola Tesla are they for you? Well they aren't for everyone in the U.S. this guy has a hobby, others used to scrap to support their families. Now, even metal recycling isn't a sustainable business.
My eye is drawn to the pour... Mesmerizing.
Is there any advantage to quenching them in water instead of oil? I would think oil would be the better choice to ensure more uniform cooling for a closer and stronger grain structure.
They’re gonna be remelted anyway I don’t think it matters + hot oil splashing everywhere doesn’t sound fun
Even when forging steel you can achieve a tight grain structure with water. You need to ensure when you quench, that the metal is in its optimal temperature. Oil is just easier to use.
Are you guys metallurgists?
@@noxolomalgas8074 I've delved in it a little bit, but not enough to really say I'm good at it.
@@noxolomalgas8074 Didn't you know that everybody who comments on TH-cam are experts in every possible topic?
This was a great video! Very satisfying to see molten metal be poured and formed.
6 pounds of raw aluminum: about $85
10-15 gallons of propane: $30-$45
Inhaling super toxic aluminum fumes, inks, glues used for attaching the tops and bottoms of the can, BPA varnish used for can liner: priceless!
A good video at the end of day and he did say he’s not doing it for the money. Otherwise totally not worth the risk.
Nice! Not to mention several other dangers!
Would not be better to sell the cans and buy aluminium bars for art projects? that was a lot of beer!
@Rejean Nowlan no just a waste of time and thought
Me: how long did it take to drinks all those like a year or 2
Him: that was only last night
Everybody: bruh
Hey there .. loved this video.. by the way .. what will you do with all those bars. ? Just curious.
I love melting aluminum cans ,it’s fun
I want to see a video on how to make a forge out of a propane bottle
Jason Matthew sane here
Make one in a mound of dirt where nothing can catch fire. Make a hole with line it with bricks, make sure you have holes for bellowing air. Fuel the forge with charcoal (using an air gun from an air compressor)
these fuelcan foundries are cool and all, but when I build one I really wanna make it larger than just a little can... maybe do something with an old boiler tank - have a proper crucible shifting and pouring rig supported from the ceiling, etc...
Good one. No music just real life sound. So much better than overdub voice or music.well done.
There was definitely music lol.
My dad made a smelter on a small TRAILER. On the GAS tanks my little brother wrote HELTER SMELTER.
Helter Smelter LLC
Either this man throws lots of parties or he’s an alcoholic. Great video
_"It's Hot ! "_
Best Paris Hilton impersonation.
That propane tank furnace is pretty rad! 🍻🇨🇦
I worked in the scrap metal business for 32 years. He’s actually losing money doing this. Makes for a very interesting hobby though!
Can you explain I'm 10
pewpew pickle well in this case time is money. The worth of each can for recycling is 5 cents in most states. So for all those cans the process of crushing them takes....TIME... and then to routinely pick one up and place it in the furnace takes...TIME... and currently the value of can aluminum per pound is remarkably low possibly 3 dollars im not sure. So....in conclusion the process possibly took him an hour plus. The value of 5 pounds of aluminum im sure isnt more than 10 bucks. Pretty much he cant ever make a living or a hustle out of this for his time. But as a hobby its pretty cool. Hobbies usually cost money anyways so this is kind of an inexpensive hobby.
@@pewpewpickl I think that in America, when you return a can they give you like 5p or something. They don't have that in the uk, which is why cans are all over the place.
Jose Henriquez plus he’s using a lot of propane . Last time I filled my barbecues 5 gallon tank it was around $19.00 .
He isn't doing it for money.
I got upto 1100 celsius and still nothing melted...any ideas?
What are you trying to melt at this temperature? Also, how did you measure? Are you sure that your thermometer shows the correct reading?
@@bormisha meant to be aliminium
Not hot enough
@@joshuahill9889 I'm pretty sure you aren't familiar with celcius lol
Yeah what metal are you melting, if it is aluminum then your thermometer is wrong. You could be mistaken for another metal such as steel.
phoebe: So what kind of things do you like to do at home?
frank jr: Melt stuff.
I'm just impressed about the amount of beer cans in there haha. It's also really satisfying watching the video seeing trash turned into something usable again.
Just an FYI for you and others that need aluminum somewhat in bulk like that, check with your local garage door companies as the drums and spring plugs used in the torsion systems are cast aluminum. When doors are “retrofitted” (replaced) all the metal is usually thrown in roll off dumpsters for metal scrap. The cast aluminum goes in with the ferrous (such a waste). Depending on how busy the door company stays you should be able to easily fill a couple 55 gallon drums a month. (I did for years)
How much time did the melting, casting and cooling take? What portion of a tank of propane was used? How much larger setup is feasible to run on that size burner and propane tank? Thank you.
From the description
"Today I'll be melting about 300 aluminum cans at home in my backyard foundry. I have been saving these beer and soda cans from some time and I'll turn them into big pure aluminum ingots. This is a very simple DIY project that anyone can do with the proper tools. The whole melting process took about an hour and used a quarter tank of propane."
When it said remove the slag from the top, I thought my ex girlfriend was going to make an appearance.
So basically you took a propane tank cut the top off insulated the inside and ordered the gas pipe and hoses. Neat!!!
Made just enough money to pay for 1/10 of his propane use.
That's propane Bobby
It's not about the money. It's about impressing your friends with all the silver you have amassed...no, they are not allowed to touch it.
I was thinking the same thing what a waste of time and money
He could have just returned them for 10 cents each. He would have got 30 bucks in Michigan and not paid for propane. Could have got a case of good beer and a pizza.
@@jpvoodoo5522 you definitely don't get 10 cents each
Easy, yes. Dangerous? DEFINITELY.
I would like to put an extra emphasis on the term "with the proper tools" since this man is using the proper tools (except the first gloves that burnt out).
Good job!
Dangerous isn't the word to describe it. Its VERY dangerous. Molten metal or slag with any form of moisture is like a bomb. When water gets around molten metal, it's basically a bomb. Granted a little amount isn't bad but in the thousands if pounds amount, it is like an IED bomb. Water on top is okay but if water gets trapped under the metal it goes boom
I just throw mine in a black contractor bag , take them 3 miles to the recycling place , get a case of beer on the way back, call it even
Like they say K-I-S-S. keep it simple stupid
Same , 35 cents a lb
J B. Nobody's going to watch my video of how I converted a heavy duty paper shredder into a can shredder so I could get more of them into the bag.
contractor bag is key
@@abedanielspictures I'd watch that!
Quick question... why salt as flux instead of Borax? I have not cast aluminum before ( ironically I used to return cans for the deposit to afford the copper, brass, and silver that I did cast ) but I had the best results with Borax as flux and a graphite rod for the slag.
Love the video.
Would you kindly elaborate on this? I'm not sure what the Flux is for at all and don't understand why a graphite rod would help.
This is so cool! I love those sculptures they make by pouring aluminum in an anthill and I’d love to have one but they are way overpriced for me! This way I could make my own!
I never use flux been told to use borax and never have and bars always look fine. What is the flux for and how does it help?
Borax will only help with copper and brass. Aluminum it won’t do anything. Flux is used to help with impurities in the metal
@@ArtByAdrock oh I only normally melt aluminium anyway lol
@@ArtByAdrock aren't fluxes for helping the metal melt at lower temperatures?
No it won’t lower the melting point of the metal
Wouldn't the gas cost more than the metal you get from it?
Yeah, not just the money, but the idea of recycling and using gas to do it with. Like all these electric cars, yet the process to make them, the batteries and charging the batteries just isn't worth it.
Boyd Merriman the process will get better over time, still better then coal
Yes, the gas used to melt would not be cost effective but, since he is melting them into bars for art projects it is much less expensive for him to get this much metal vs. an art or jewelry supplier!
Couldn't you just put loads into a big bucket on a fire ?
@@zatrusofnietzche2281 Wouldn't reach the desired temperature.
This was by far the most resourceful video I could have hoped to find.
I like the cute little ingots you wind up with. Wish I had a use for aluminum, I'd make some.
That's a lot of propane is it worth it?
1 pound is worth ~45 cents in price of scrap (remember it does fluctuate). 30 cans (before slag and impurities) makes a pound. You can decide if all that is worth the 1.5 cents per can.
@@midwestmind691 depends on the recycler too
Where did you get that can crusher at the start?
You can order them online or some home improvement stores carry them...
Liked and subbed :) Recently got my Vevor 12kg melter, rigidised it, waited 5 days to dry, today i put the refractory cement on and that'll be dry in another day. I was jealous of your lovely new devil forge in your other video with its nice smooth pre-cemented surface :)