
How
to Build an Oil Fired tilting Furncace by
Steve Chastain
Price $19.95
FRONT
COVER BACK
COVER TABLE
OF CONTENTS
This
is the latest from the prolific workshop of Steve Chastain.
Build this Oil Fired Tilting furnace and you will be casting
new Knuckle Heads for your mother-in-laws '39 Hard-Tail Harley
in no time!
This
well written book will not only show you how to make the furnace,
but also how to build the centrifugal fan, an oil feed tank,
an oil refueling tank and pitot tube manometer unit. All the
gear necessary to efficiently run your new rig. Being oil
fired it is also lot cheaper to run than a propane unit because
you can use low cost or free used motor oil. It also runs
quieter than a propane fired furnace.
Steve
isn't satisfied with just showing you how to build it, he
also gives you the technical details behind the design, in
practical terms. You would need access to an engineering library
to find as much information as this book has in one place.
Numerous clear photos and sketches illustrate the concepts
and construction. 
Here,
Steve Chastain will show you how to build a furnace capable
of melting fifty pounds of aluminum per melt which comes to
about a hundred pounds per hour. "The furnace is to be
built from common materials such as sand, clay, pipe, rectangular
tubing and an old 30-gallon drum. The furnace shown in this
plan set may be built for $200 or less...". And you fire
it with propane or used motor oil.
"The
furnace tilts around the spout and not the center of gravity
so that the stream of molten aluminum remains in a fixed location
and does not change with the furnace angle."
You
get not only the details on building and firing this beaut,
but Steve will give you the formulas and basic theory you
need to make design changes to meet your own needs.
You'll
learn how to build a laminar flow burner nozzle, and how to
proportion the design so that the furnace tilts safely and
easily. And you'll be shown how to build the blower and a
manometer. Then Steve will show how a furnace is built and
used.
Tools?
Well, you'll need a lathe to fabricate the venturi and a few
small parts. You'll need a welder, and I think a power hacksaw
or bandsaw sure would save the arm muscles. In other words,
you ain't gonna build this on the kitchen table. But you ain't
gonna need a giant machine shop either.
This
book and the furnace it describes is worth having. Not only
does Steve show you how to build a working furnace useful
for pouring one-off large castings, or many small duplicate
castings that can be sold, but it also shows you some of the
basic furnace/combustion theory that goes into the design
of a furnace. And whether or not you build this furnace exactly
as is, the background knowledge can greatly extend your understanding
of foundry practice.
Good
stuff. Well illustrated.
Get
a copy. It's worth having. Excellent quality. 5-1/2 x 8-1/2
softcover 192 pages