From Scrap To Sword: Casting Pewter

[TheBackyardScientist] has been living up to his name, this time by casting a pewter sword in his yard. Pewter is a soft alloy of mostly (85–99%) tin along with copper, antimony and bismuth. Older pewter castings often used lead as well. The great thing about pewter is its low melting point of 170–230 °C. At such low temperatures, pewter can be melted down on a common hot plate. Think of it as an easy way to get into the world of metal casting – no forge required. Of course, anyone who has been splashed with solder will tell you that hot molten metal always deserves a lot of respect.

[BackyardScientist] obtained his metal by hunting the local thrift stores. He used the “lost foam” method of casting, by carving a sword out of styrofoam. The sword was embedded in a 5 gallon bucket of sand with a riser to allow the mold to be filled. The pewter was melted on a cheap hot plate, and poured into the mold. The hot metal melts the foam on contact, simultaneously filling up the cavity left over in the sand mold. [BackyardScientist] was left with a solid pewter sword. It won’t hold an edge, but it is a great illustration of the technique.

Click past the break to see [TheBackyardScientist’s] video.

17 thoughts on “From Scrap To Sword: Casting Pewter

  1. Ahhh. no forge required <—- sorry a forge is used to heat metal for working on an anvil like horseshoes or swords.
    what you meant to say was a foundry. which is used with a crucible to melt metals for casting.
    It never fails to make me laugh at some of the things posted here

    1. Ignorance and vocabulary fascism do not go well together. Forge comes from old French, meaning to fabricate, and has even earlier roots in the Latin word for workshop. Forge is a perfectly fine word to use and we all know what they are talking about.

    1. I would rather call it a dagger shaped tin bat than a dagger or sword. Because the person who gets attacked by it will rather die from kinetic impact damage than from any cuts or stabs

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