Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Great stuff, and jolly good fun making your own parts.

Anyone looked into making their own aluminium sand castings ? I have been doing a bit of a net search on this, and it looks to be a bit of an interesting new challenge, and not very expensive to try either.

Golly, people have been sand casting stuff for thousands of years, it is not high tech. Should not be hard to DIY in the garage either.

Check out google "sand casting" absolutely fascinating. I had no idea it would be so easy to build a furnace using natural gas and a hair dryer used as an air blower. Plenty of scrap aluminium car parts around to melt down as well.

Anyone here actually done this ?

Ally has some troubling properties when melting/casting so I have left the whole idea alone, particularly the after roughing effort required...artificially ageing, solid solutions and binary phase diagrams. Not something I would be getting too far into in the garage.

i toyed with casting some time ago.....i started to make a wooden plug for a set of engine cases to take two CR500 motorcross bike cylinders...the aim was to acheive a V twin 1000cc twostroke engine to fit into a RGV250 ...i shelved the project and fitted an RG500 4cylinder twostroke instead...my plan was to cast a mould off the wooden plug and pull a product out....but i ran out of time and it got shelved...the tunnels need to pour the molten ally would have to have been quite intricate

Ally has some troubling properties when melting/casting so I have left the whole idea alone, particularly the after roughing effort required...artificially ageing, solid solutions and binary phase diagrams. Not something I would be getting too far into in the garage.

Oh on another note....take a look at Brittan.....the man did all his stuff himself in his shed...cast his own wheels in a garbage bin ect....he was a kiwi but we cant hold that against him :) but he was intelligent

Some people have had a fair bit of success, the main thing being to de-gas the molten aluminium just before the pour. Otherwise you end up with porosity and other problems.

Yes you must know all about metallurgy, heat treatment, ageing, and so on. A person can learn to weld without knowing anything about eutectic states and binary phase diagrams.

Its like driving a car. You cannot learn to drive unless you have ten years experience in combustion chemistry, thermodynamics, mechanical engineering, oil refining, and bearing technology. Without a very deep understanding of all the technology, just turning the ignition key can kill you. I don't think so.

People have been successfully casting metal for at least five thousand years. It is basically a very simple process.

Hobbyists are doing it at home all over the world. Check the internet.

yeah its a pretty simple procedure if you can get the alloy in a clean molten state. If would be particually helpfull to make inlet a nice inet manifold or some cooler end tanks where the strength is not important rather the shape required.

Exactly. I am thinking of non stressed, non structural parts. Things like plenums, pipework elbows and reducers for intercooler pipework, intercooler end tanks and so on. Things that do not require precision machining, but can be hand finished.

I think it is the sort of thing you would need to practice at to get your technique spot on. I guess it is like spray painting or welding, you can only learn so much from books. You must actually do it yourself and get the technique right.

The beauty is, that the metal, and the casting sand is very cheap and can be re-used. Its not like it is going to cost a fortune every time you try it.

I would love to try a custom plenum.

you could take a copy of a greddy plenum, then mod them to suit RB20 - you would make a killing. sounds like fun, even if you do fark it.

still chuckling about the thought of an RG250 being converted to a two stroke Vtwin 1000cc - a shame you never completed that one ylwgtr2 - I would pay money to see that:)

you could take a copy of a greddy plenum, then mod them to suit RB20 - you would make a killing.  sounds like fun, even if you do fark it.

still chuckling about the thought of an RG250 being converted to a two stroke Vtwin 1000cc - a shame you never completed that one ylwgtr2 - I would pay money to see that:)

" copped a rush at 1 in the morning and decided to make them"

Copped a rush and decided to make a pulley. Geez.. Most guys I know that cop a rush at 1 in the morning will either take the car out for a squirt or rip out the old fella and give it a beating. LOL

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Out here E90s are the cheapest way into a sporty-ish car because everyone knows just how expensive the repairs can get. 8-10k USD for an automatic 335i. 
    • Noted. Have noticed BMW are more 'high maintenance' for sure. They've attracted my attention as I think the used car prices seem reasonable vs other options, and the extra quality overall vs a commodore / camry / corolla or similar of the same vintage is appealing, especially the interior, and they are more on the sporty side whereas the others mentioned can be more cruising or economical A-to-B only.
    • Haha yeah I know, this is SAU after all, why are we talking about BMW's of all things!? I hear you on the 'don't have to worry about it' side of things. Having been fortunate enough to be have been able to buy a brand new motorbike or two...never really enjoyed them as much as I'd have liked as you worry so much about where you park it, will it get scratched, stolen, attempted theft, knocked over, etc...and yes dirty. Older less valuable bikes you can just go where you want and park it wherever and not really worry that much in comparison. And who cares if it gets dirty! Never owned a V8, and have had my eyes on VE / VF commodores for years but with their prices climbing so high, the M3 has come into focus more as prices are much closer than I've ever seen...is it a potential contender now?...of course need to factor in the S65 'maintenance' especially and like you said general M car 'tax'. One can dream anyway. But more on the reality front - did read the whole 330i thread as well and was a great read too, both threads enlightening as I've never even driven one of these cars! I do recall 330i didn't seem to have the same amount of issues for almost the same car (turbos and related differences notwithstanding)...perhaps down to getting it earlier in it's life so looked after better than the 335i? Perhaps so as your 130i has been good and quite similar, so finding a car that's been looked after well is the especially-crucial-BMW-first-step.
    • Nice. Dont worry about the time of not running. My current skyline hasn't run since I bought it. About 8 years ago.
    • It's also worth noting that I am heavily and unconditionally biased. I've had a lot of cars including some GTRs a fair while ago. I love my BMW's now a lot. They make no sense a lot of the time and the guys on here remind me regularly that I could get something else that does what I want better and cheaper. If you're going to take on an older BMW it's definitely a commitment. If you bail on it early you'll lose money and also the ability for it to put a smile on your face. Stick with it and it just gets better.  f**k I should get into advertising.  
×
×
  • Create New...