Wintertime Bullet Casting Question.
Forum rules
Welcome to the Leverguns.Com General Discussions Forum. This is a high-class place so act respectable. We discuss most anything here other than politics... politely.
Please post political post in the new Politics forum.
Welcome to the Leverguns.Com General Discussions Forum. This is a high-class place so act respectable. We discuss most anything here other than politics... politely.
Please post political post in the new Politics forum.
Wintertime Bullet Casting Question.
The only casting I've done to date was over warm weather.
I did my casting in the garage with the side door open and the roll up door up all the way and a fan running to circulate air.
I'd like to cast no more than 100 bullet's here in the January cold today.
I'm just wondering how y'all that cast year round handle the ventilation issue in the wintertime.
I did my casting in the garage with the side door open and the roll up door up all the way and a fan running to circulate air.
I'd like to cast no more than 100 bullet's here in the January cold today.
I'm just wondering how y'all that cast year round handle the ventilation issue in the wintertime.
Re: Wintertime Bullet Casting Question.
I open up the roll up doors and turn on the exhaust fan. But then again I live in Florida so it isn't really a hardship.
- vancelw
- Advanced Levergunner
- Posts: 3980
- Joined: Mon Sep 28, 2009 1:56 pm
- Location: 90% NE Texas and 10% SE Montana
Re: Wintertime Bullet Casting Question.
Always a smart aleck in the group!wolfdog wrote:I open up the roll up doors and turn on the exhaust fan. But then again I live in Florida so it isn't really a hardship.

I seldom cast in very cold weather for that reason. It seems like the slightest breeze cools the mould off too quickly. I cast in my shop with 17 foot ceiling. It's well insulated and there's no breeze if I shut all the doors. Next time I try casting in cold weather I'm going to put up sidewalls so the pot and mould won't get direct air movement from the exhaust fan. It's hot work, casting in warm weather, but it seems to be easier to make consistent bullets when it's warm. Just gotta be careful about letting sweat drop in the pot!
"Make yourself an honest man, and then you may be sure that there is one less scoundrel in the world." - Thomas Carlyle
-
- Advanced Levergunner
- Posts: 4145
- Joined: Fri Dec 21, 2007 11:34 am
- Location: north of Palacios about 1400 miles
Re: Wintertime Bullet Casting Question.
I always casted in the basement with a window cracked and a fan pointed towards it.
30/30 Winchester: Not accurate enough fer varmints, barely adequate for small deer; BUT In a 10" to 14" barrelled pistol; is good for moose/elk to 200 yards; ground squirrels to 300 metres
250 Savage... its what the 223 wishes it could be...!
250 Savage... its what the 223 wishes it could be...!
Re: Wintertime Bullet Casting Question.
If you are only casting 100 bullets or about 1 hrs worth, I would not worry about ventilation as long as the pot temp is below 900 degrees. I have cast bullets for years in the basement with little to no ventilation (no fluxing except outdoors!). I typically cast for no longer than 2 hrs at a time and my yearly physical indicates my lead levels are within the normal range.
w30wcf
w30wcf
aka John Kort
aka Jack Christian SASS 11993 "I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me." Philippians 4:13
aka w44wcf (black powder)
NRA Life member
.22 WCF, .30 WCF, .44 WCF Cartridge Historian
aka Jack Christian SASS 11993 "I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me." Philippians 4:13
aka w44wcf (black powder)
NRA Life member
.22 WCF, .30 WCF, .44 WCF Cartridge Historian
- Shasta
- Senior Levergunner
- Posts: 1577
- Joined: Thu Sep 06, 2007 10:50 pm
- Location: Shasta County, the far right stronghold in California
Re: Wintertime Bullet Casting Question.
I have an 8'x12' insulated wood frame shed out back dedicated to my constant reloading activities. It seldom gets below freezing temperature around here. The shed has an evaporative cooling fan for summer use and a propane heater for winter use. My reloading bench extends the entire length of the 12' wall, and one end of the bench is reserved for bullet casting. Over the lead pot I have a built-in hood with exhaust fan, the kind you see over kitchen stoves. It works OK except when I add flux to the lead pot, creating great clouds of smoky air. For this I open the door and turn on the evaporative cooler's high volume fan to quickly blow the smoke out of the small room. I do most of my casting in the wintertime as summertime is extremely hot around here, and sometimes I will cast bullets all day long. I've been doing this for many years.
I had my doctor check my blood a couple years ago for lead levels and they were in the normal range.
SHASTA
I had my doctor check my blood a couple years ago for lead levels and they were in the normal range.
SHASTA
California Rifle & Pistol Association LIFE Member
National Rifle Association BENEFACTOR LIFE Member
http://www.hcrpclub.org/schedule.html
avatar pic is Shasta Dam, Shasta Lake, & Mt. Shasta
National Rifle Association BENEFACTOR LIFE Member
http://www.hcrpclub.org/schedule.html
avatar pic is Shasta Dam, Shasta Lake, & Mt. Shasta
Re: Wintertime Bullet Casting Question.
I do most of my casting in my basement, 9 foot ceilings, and the casement window is directly above my casting pot. I crack the window a little when heating lead and actual casting, but when fluxing I just open it up, amazing how good a draft I get through that window. When it is cold like this the wood stove and pellet stove help.
I also keep a couple layered sheet of tinfoil on top of the pot to help keep the heat in.
I do first melt outside, I have a really good place to get pure lead, but even that has that white nasty lead oxide on it, that is the dangerous stuff, it can enter the blood stream via breathing or unprotected skin. If you have any pure lead with that white powdery oxide on it, spray with shaving cream, then wipe of with rags and dispose of those rags.
Also wheel weights are nasty too, I try to clean them in a bucket of degreaser, then drain and dry, them melt into ingots outside.
Steve
I also keep a couple layered sheet of tinfoil on top of the pot to help keep the heat in.
I do first melt outside, I have a really good place to get pure lead, but even that has that white nasty lead oxide on it, that is the dangerous stuff, it can enter the blood stream via breathing or unprotected skin. If you have any pure lead with that white powdery oxide on it, spray with shaving cream, then wipe of with rags and dispose of those rags.
Also wheel weights are nasty too, I try to clean them in a bucket of degreaser, then drain and dry, them melt into ingots outside.
Steve
Re: Wintertime Bullet Casting Question.
I would just crack a window a bit and leave the door open a couple inches. Use the fan off to one side to direct the smoke towards the door, just move the air across the pot away from your face, and you'll be fine (when you flux mebbe open the door some more and leave until the smoke clears). While the temps usually don't get below 35-40 degrees here, it does rain a lot and I cast year round with this set-up...
BYW; lead ain't an evil demon just waiting to attack your brains and destroy your children's lives. It's just a common metal that some politicians have vilified in order to get votes, being "green" is way PC today. Use common sense and you won't ever have a problem; don't stand over the pot and do deep breathing exercises, just keep the air circulating. Don't chew on a bullet while you are casting. Wash your hands after a casting session. Don't stick your fingers in your mouth when you burn them.
And keep safe; always wear eye protection (I have tiny little melted spots on the lenses of my glasses where an itty-bitty blob of hot lead landed. Mebbe from dropping a cull back into the pot). Some keep a large tray under the pot to catch any spills. Always wear shoes and long pants while casting (Being of Okie lineage and growing up in coastal Southern CA I very often go barefoot or wear Birkenstocks, so I have burned the top of my feet from globs of lead a couple times; "oops, forgot my shoes!"). At some time or another you will get burned, expect it. Some wear gloves but I don't like the lack of feel or control when wearing gloves. Don't get excited when you drop a "perfect" bullet from your mold and pick it up to look closer BTDT! Just use common horse sense and you'll be OK and have fun...
BYW; lead ain't an evil demon just waiting to attack your brains and destroy your children's lives. It's just a common metal that some politicians have vilified in order to get votes, being "green" is way PC today. Use common sense and you won't ever have a problem; don't stand over the pot and do deep breathing exercises, just keep the air circulating. Don't chew on a bullet while you are casting. Wash your hands after a casting session. Don't stick your fingers in your mouth when you burn them.
And keep safe; always wear eye protection (I have tiny little melted spots on the lenses of my glasses where an itty-bitty blob of hot lead landed. Mebbe from dropping a cull back into the pot). Some keep a large tray under the pot to catch any spills. Always wear shoes and long pants while casting (Being of Okie lineage and growing up in coastal Southern CA I very often go barefoot or wear Birkenstocks, so I have burned the top of my feet from globs of lead a couple times; "oops, forgot my shoes!"). At some time or another you will get burned, expect it. Some wear gloves but I don't like the lack of feel or control when wearing gloves. Don't get excited when you drop a "perfect" bullet from your mold and pick it up to look closer BTDT! Just use common horse sense and you'll be OK and have fun...
Last edited by mikld on Sat Jan 17, 2015 12:51 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Mike
Vocatus atque non vocatus, Deus aderit...
I've learned how to stand on my own two knees...
Vocatus atque non vocatus, Deus aderit...
I've learned how to stand on my own two knees...
- ollogger
- Advanced Levergunner
- Posts: 2872
- Joined: Mon Jul 05, 2010 2:47 pm
- Location: Wheatland Wyoming
- Contact:
Re: Wintertime Bullet Casting Question.
I try to do mine in the summer the wind here makes it impossible to cast out side in the winter
Brad
Brad
Re: Wintertime Bullet Casting Question.
The nasty job of melting wheelweights down to ingots is done outside. The other 99.9% of my casting is done in the basement. I'm not freezing my butt off, nor am I gonna sweat in the summer. Life is full of enough challenges.
When my inlaws were replacing the big blower/heater in their butcher shop, I took out the fan from the old one. I have it so I can put it in front of the basement window.......so.....I take out the window, install the fan and open another window on the other side of the basement....it all takes about 45 seconds...........that baby will suck out the smokey air and about anything else if it gets too close to it.-----6

When my inlaws were replacing the big blower/heater in their butcher shop, I took out the fan from the old one. I have it so I can put it in front of the basement window.......so.....I take out the window, install the fan and open another window on the other side of the basement....it all takes about 45 seconds...........that baby will suck out the smokey air and about anything else if it gets too close to it.-----6

This is Boring & Mindless……Wasted Energy
Re: Wintertime Bullet Casting Question.
I cast all winter in the garage with the man door propped open and a window over the casting bench open. A fan by the door blowing in and a small one in the window blowing out takes care of my ventilation. To account for the temperature change I find that I cast a bit faster in the winter but do not change the pot temperature (it's PID controlled), its not conscious but I do empty the pot more quickly when it's 0 than when it's 85. I wear my insulated carhartt coveralls, warm boots, heavy asbestos foundry gloves and get to work.
Eric
Eric
Re: Wintertime Bullet Casting Question.
I was casting outside on both 12/25 & NY day. 21° on Christmas & 18° on New Year's. What's the big deal? Wear a coat.
Re: Wintertime Bullet Casting Question.
2571,2571 wrote:I was casting outside on both 12/25 & NY day. 21° on Christmas & 18° on New Year's. What's the big deal? Wear a coat.
My guess is you are a youngster....

Besides, when it is especially cold, it's hard to keep the pot at 750 or 800.......takes considerably longer, after emptying the hot lead, to replenish the pot with ingots to be melted for the next batch.
I guess it really depends on how long of a casting session your doing. When I cast, im at it at least 5-7 hours, winding up with several thousand bullets.-----6
This is Boring & Mindless……Wasted Energy
-
- Advanced Levergunner
- Posts: 2569
- Joined: Sat Sep 15, 2007 12:51 pm
Re: Wintertime Bullet Casting Question.
I place a little fan like the kind found in the power supply of older computers next to the pot to pull away the fumes.. The fan is rigged with ducting hose ( that silver stuff ) like the kind found cars that I run out the window...
Good luck
Good luck
"IT IS MY OPINION, AND I AM CORRECT SO DON'T ARGUE, THE 99 SAVAGE IS THE FINEST RIFLE EVER MADE IN AMERICA."
WIL TERRY
WIL TERRY
- fordwannabe
- Advanced Levergunner
- Posts: 3373
- Joined: Thu Apr 02, 2009 8:52 am
- Location: Womelsdorf PA
Re: Wintertime Bullet Casting Question.
I cast in my shed out back. I has a set of double doors to get the lawn tractor in and a man door on the side. I open the man door and tie the double doors open with about a foot opening between them. I place a fan behind me and blow toward the double doors never smokey or stinky, and the pot and a old carhart keep me semi comfortable. Tom
I live in Berks county so the weather is pretty much the same as yours.
I live in Berks county so the weather is pretty much the same as yours.
a Pennsylvanian who has been accused of clinging to my religion and my guns......Good assessment skills.
Re: Wintertime Bullet Casting Question.
I followed your method John.w30wcf wrote:If you are only casting 100 bullets or about 1 hrs worth, I would not worry about ventilation as long as the pot temp is below 900 degrees. I have cast bullets for years in the basement with little to no ventilation (no fluxing except outdoors!). I typically cast for no longer than 2 hrs at a time and my yearly physical indicates my lead levels are within the normal range.
w30wcf
I cast about 70 total, 50 keepers.
I keep my pot at the 7.5 on the dial. Not sure what that equates to in temp.
The reason I needed 50 round's is I made another homemade old school box.
Here they are lubed and ready to cut. I'll do that and load them tomorrow.
38 wcf

Re: Wintertime Bullet Casting Question.
Why, thank you Sixgun. At 65 I consider myself and old fanny burp.
I cast 2-3 hours at a sitting but then get bored.
I use cinder blocks to divert wind wind around my electric pot. After about 10°, it becomes hard to cast with my gear because I can't keep the melt evenly heated.
I try not to cast in the heat of summer but there's really only 2 seasons here - winter & the month of July.
I cast 2-3 hours at a sitting but then get bored.
I use cinder blocks to divert wind wind around my electric pot. After about 10°, it becomes hard to cast with my gear because I can't keep the melt evenly heated.
I try not to cast in the heat of summer but there's really only 2 seasons here - winter & the month of July.
- Griff
- Posting leader...
- Posts: 21173
- Joined: Sat Mar 31, 2007 4:56 pm
- Location: OH MY GAWD they installed a STOP light!!!
Re: Wintertime Bullet Casting Question.
I cast in an uninsulated barn... or workshop attached to it. It has a few drafts, but, when casting in the winter, I fire up the propane space heater to regulate my temp... crack open the man-door, put the box fan in front of it on low and let it do it's thing. I can't run 3 molds like in the summer, but can still run two. My casting sessions ARE shorter... And I tend to pick the more unseasonable days!!! 

Griff,
SASS/CMSA #93
NRA Patron
GUSA #93
There is a fine line between hobby & obsession!
AND... I'm over it!!
No I ain't ready, but let's do it anyway!
SASS/CMSA #93
NRA Patron
GUSA #93
There is a fine line between hobby & obsession!
AND... I'm over it!!
No I ain't ready, but let's do it anyway!
Re: Wintertime Bullet Casting Question.
In the winter or summer I cast at the shop now indoors !
I crack two doors and create a draft , but I usually never cast more then 2 hours or so .
I cast about 100 of the NOE/RD 432-265GC HP bullet last week as a matter of fact .
I crack two doors and create a draft , but I usually never cast more then 2 hours or so .
I cast about 100 of the NOE/RD 432-265GC HP bullet last week as a matter of fact .
Parkers , Mannlicher Schoenauer’s , 6.5mm's and my family in the Philippines !
Re: Wintertime Bullet Casting Question.
I hear ya 2571! For some strange reason , I always pictured you as a young guy with a suit and tie.....ready to take on the world......you talk "young"------6
This is Boring & Mindless……Wasted Energy
Re: Wintertime Bullet Casting Question.
I cast 200+ .38-40-180 bullets yesterday and 160 .45-70-514 today. Tomorrow I'll repeat the .45 cal work. I am too chicken to cast inside, no matter what, but my garage with the big door open and often other doors, is where I do my work. And the casting station is right there, next to the door too. The cold weather is fine, even prefered. I can cast faster than ever. I keep my lead at 800F typically.
Re: Wintertime Bullet Casting Question.
Wow! I spent close to 2 hours start to finish on my little casting session yesterday.BrentD wrote:I cast 200+ .38-40-180 bullets yesterday and 160 .45-70-514 today. Tomorrow I'll repeat the .45 cal work. I am too chicken to cast inside, no matter what, but my garage with the big door open and often other doors, is where I do my work. And the casting station is right there, next to the door too. The cold weather is fine, even prefered. I can cast faster than ever. I keep my lead at 800F typically.
I take my time and savor the moment.
I do baby that old Winchester mold and Winchester loading tool.
For me, it's definitely not about mass production

Re: Wintertime Bullet Casting Question.
I've got a lot of shooting to do, and I need a lot of bullets. The season is not really that far off - the first match is in March and then May, June, July will come like lightning. I hope to have all my brass reloaded for at least the first pass by the end of February and I would love to have all of my summer's bullets cast by then.
I only spend about 2 hrs casting at a time. A little less on Saturday when I was using a double cavity mould, and the bullets are small at 180 grs. Today, it goes about 80/hr. I don't savor it, but I work hard to make sure I have the best possible bullets for the .45s. That paces me at about 80/hr.
I only spend about 2 hrs casting at a time. A little less on Saturday when I was using a double cavity mould, and the bullets are small at 180 grs. Today, it goes about 80/hr. I don't savor it, but I work hard to make sure I have the best possible bullets for the .45s. That paces me at about 80/hr.
Re: Wintertime Bullet Casting Question.
I cast in a shed or my garage when it gets cold and don't worry much about ventilation with my rcbs pot. It doesn't get hot enough to vaporize the lead. Seems normal drafts are enough. I always melt down wheel weights outside or any time I'm using gas that can get the lead hotter. I handle lead several times a week. With common sense and good hygiene, my blood level has been <5 for years.
-
- Advanced Levergunner
- Posts: 4296
- Joined: Wed Sep 15, 2010 12:57 pm
- Location: Vinita, I.T.
Re: Wintertime Bullet Casting Question.
Don't you guys know that you're supposed to light the smoke over the pot when fluxing?
M. M. Wright, Sheriff, Green county Arkansas (1860)
Currently living my eternal life.
NRA Life
SASS
ITSASS
Currently living my eternal life.
NRA Life
SASS
ITSASS
- Old Ironsights
- Posting leader...
- Posts: 15083
- Joined: Mon Apr 02, 2007 9:27 am
- Location: Waiting for the Collapse
- Contact:
Re: Wintertime Bullet Casting Question.
When I had the space available, I cast in an enclosed basement - but with a Venting Range Hood over my pots that exhausted out a bit of PVC through a hole in the mudsill.
The Vent Hood cost about $20 at a yard sale, the PVC even less. The CFM of a Range Hood is plenty for casting.
The Vent Hood cost about $20 at a yard sale, the PVC even less. The CFM of a Range Hood is plenty for casting.
C2N14... because life is not energetic enough.
מנא, מנא, תקל, ופרסין Daniel 5:25-28... Got 7.62?
Not Depressed enough yet? Go read National Geographic, July 1976
Gott und Gewehr mit uns!
מנא, מנא, תקל, ופרסין Daniel 5:25-28... Got 7.62?
Not Depressed enough yet? Go read National Geographic, July 1976
Gott und Gewehr mit uns!