What alternative can i use instead of purchasing an ingot mold?

micksis86

New member
So I'm pretty new to casting. It isn't something that I'd ever considered doing until I picked up some equipment really cheap the other day. But the more research I do the more interested i'm getting in casting. This is the first of what will hopefully not be too many questions.

Do most people buy an ingot mold? Or could I use something else like a cupcake baking tray or something. Money is tight hence part of the reason that i'm getting into casting so if i can avoid buying an ingot mold for now that would be great.

Thanks
 
Heavy duty muffin pans, and I think I would skip anything coated. I was lucky enough to get an ingot mold when I got my casting gear, haven't tried muffin pans yet. Check over at castboolits.gunloads.com for a lot more casting info!
 
I would just use regular pans.If the lead sticks a little, you can wipe the pan with a rag that has a little WD-40 on it. It will burn off when you remelt it and don't forget to ladle off the dross.
 
I use on of those cast iron corn cob shaped corn bread pans. The corn muffin ingots fit perfectly in my lee pot.
 
I got a cast iron muffin pan off ebay for 4.00. check around at flea markets, might find 'em cheaper. I think I read on one of the threads here that lead ingots will stick to tin ones and the ones with soldered cups fall apart from the heat.
 
I've got three different muffin tins that I use for making ingots after smelting. One, a corncob-looking cast iron pan is used for wheelweights.
Another cast iron pan that makes an odd stick looking thing, I use for linotype.
The third is a common muffin tin and I use it for pure lead.

It's easy for me to look at the shape of the ingots and know what kind of lead I'm looking at. All three were picked up at garage sales/estate auctions for little or nothing.
 
I don't understand your resistance to using a genuine ingot mold. They are only about $10.00. You will pay that or more for a cast iron corn bread or muffin mold at an antique shopt, plus the gas to drive around looking for one.
One of the things I do to avoid (call it laziness) is to melt all my scrap lead in a cast iron saucepan (I think it is a two quart), dip out of that into a small pot I am actually casting from the just let it cool and harden between uses. Takes two heat sources, like an old Coleman cooking stove. Works for me.
 
Check the local thrift stores like Salvation Army or GoodWill or Habitat for Humanity I bought all my ingot molds and cast iron pots there and paid as little as 50 cants to a couple dollars. You just never know what you can find useful in those places on the cheap.
 
Rifleman, I understand you're point but i'm a student so money is exceptionally tight at the moment. I will definately buy a genuine ingot mold in the future but at the moment i'm trying to minimise expenses as much as possible.
 
I got a 'mini muffin' pan for something like $4. As the opening in my 10# Lee is a bit tight I fill each halfway, let cool and dump it over to pop them out. No issues.
 
Go to walmart and in the housewares sections you'll find Stainless Steel Condiment cups, they are 4 for 99 cents. If filled to the rim they go around 1 pound. The lead pops out very easy and they stack for convenience and neatness. I've been using the same ones for over a year and no problems.
 
Most of the cheap muffin tins don't work, I destroyed one trying to make it work. Still looking for cast iron muffin pans but I'm such a cast iron cooking fan I'll likely use it for cooking something edible. I wasted more money on gas looking for them than the Lyman ingot molds cost. I'll find some muffin pans someday, will have to get by with Lyman for now.
 
Well, I bit the bullet and got a Lyman ingot mold. I like the one pound blocks it makes. It'll make it easier to know how much lead i've put in the pot and how much solder i need to add for the tin. Figured it'd be money well spent.
 
Good move, but keep looking for the other tins. I like PawPaw's method and want to make my Pb ingots look a little different. For now I just "label" them with a big Sharpie.
 
For really cheap ingot molds, use upside down beer or pop cans. Have plenty on hand because the ingot won't come out until it's cold.

Tony
 
The best that I've found (cuz I'm too cheap to buy a cast iron cornpone pan) is 2.5 ounce stainless steel condiment cups. Walmart sells them; last I checked they were 97¢ for four. I saw 10 or 12 packs of them at Sam's Club once, but not recently. Those might have been 3 oz.
 
If you want to use muffin pans, don't use any that are soldered together, you'll just be "tinning" the pan with melted lead and it won't come out. Some of the things I've seen or heard about for ingot molds; aluminum muffin tins, alum. mess kit sides, cast alum. corn pone pans, 2" cast alum fence post caps, s.s. camp coffee mug, s.s. or alum. tubing or angle, cut in half clamped between two pieces hardwood, etc. Teflon will burn and emit toxic fumes if a non-stick pan is used. Cast iron muffin pans may need "seasoning" or rusting. Use your inmagination and find something that won't crack (or melt) when you pour molten lead into it. I don't use the commercial ingot molds (Lyman, RCBS, Lee) because I want my ingots to be different and not have their name on them...

Hmmm, I guess I'm gonna hafta go to Walmart for condiment cups!
 
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