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i am new to this bullet casting business, and living in a small (2000 population) village in spain it is not the easiest thing in the world to locate a source of tin- even to find solder has been a bit of a struggle if you wanted more than a small reel of 22swg! so, today, sitting at my favorite bar, having some lunch, watching the barman take the foil capsule from a bottle of wine and BINGO!!!!!!! A quick look in the barmans book of wine revealed that the foil capsules on bottles of wine are thesedays usually made of tin!!!!!! So, bottle of wine and a few foil capules later, melting them over the gas revealed what could conceivably be tin. Bearing in mind the smallish amounts used of tin, i now know where i will be getting mine from! And having great pleasure doing it too! Any comments welcome, please cc to my email julianmb@hotmail.com if you would be so kind. | ||
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Based on a recommendation I got years ago, I've used these seals from wine to add to lead for casting bullets. The bullets turned out fine, so I presume that the seals were indeed tin! Obviously, each bottle contributes only a small amount of tin, but then again you don't need much to help lead fill out a mould properly. jpb | |||
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Talk about generating interest in casting, LOL! | |||
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If tin is what you're after, it can be found a lot easier and in more bulk in plumber's solder. 50/50 solder is 50% tin/50% lead. 95/5 solder is 95% tin/5% antimony. I use the 95/5 at a ratio of 1/20 in WWs. There's a gracious plenty tin to insure fillout in the mold and just enough antimony to add a little hardness. There is one other type of solder I use, but I strongly reccommend a little research before one goes dumping much of it in the melt. It's called "Sterling" and it's made by the Taramet Corporation. It's 96.something % tin, 3.something % copper and .something percent selenium. These "something" values can be found on the MSDS page at the Taramet website. Puncher | |||
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Living in No. Calif. wine country, I collected wine bottle foils with the same idea. Checked and found the standard is/was (they are now all plastic) 96% lead, 4% tin. BUT, when I pigged it up and tried casting in a Lyman mould, I got a mess - no fillout, lots of wrinkles. etc., no matter what tricks I tried. Finally used the stuff to make fishing sinkers. I suspect something from the label silk-screening process, or maybe zinc or aluminum contamination. I get tin from Bill Ferguson, or from 50/50 bar solder (when I can find it). floodgate | |||
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