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Thread: Show off your cast iron

  1. #11
    Where's the epi?


    ladyhk13's Avatar
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    Great stuff! Wait until Izzy sees this thread. I believe he totally loves cast iron. When I was growing up we used it and my mom had one that was flat, round and had a tiny lip around the edge and was perfect for eggs or pancakes. Wish she still had that one.
    I apologize for nothing...

  2. #12
    This guy has "some" flashlights. Just a couple. As in, a metric-butt ton of em.

    Echo2's Avatar
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    Spoon cradle....



    Ones at shop waiting refinishing....

    The Difference Between a Welfare State and a Totalitarian State is a Matter of Time.

  3. #13
    Does NOT use a snake bit sucker kit on snake bits

    Evolver's Avatar
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    What do you do when you refinish?
    You don't need to be the strongest
    or the most intelligent to survive
    but by having the right tools and
    the adaptability of change
    is where you will prevail.

  4. #14
    This guy has "some" flashlights. Just a couple. As in, a metric-butt ton of em.

    Echo2's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Evolver View Post
    What do you do when you refinish?
    electrolysis.....in a big plastic drum and a battery charger.

    Then on the grill with rendered bacon grease....many times over.
    The Difference Between a Welfare State and a Totalitarian State is a Matter of Time.

  5. #15
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    Willie51's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Echo2 View Post
    electrolysis.....in a big plastic drum and a battery charger.

    Then on the grill with rendered bacon grease....many times over.
    Maybe you could elaborate the electrolysis setup sometime. I understand electrolysis but would like to know the details on setup and maybe some pics.

  6. #16
    Does NOT use a snake bit sucker kit on snake bits

    Evolver's Avatar
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    I knew you knew better than to put a coating on it of some sort but I thought I would just check. Re-seasoning with a electrolysis twist is what your doing then.
    You don't need to be the strongest
    or the most intelligent to survive
    but by having the right tools and
    the adaptability of change
    is where you will prevail.

  7. #17
    This guy has "some" flashlights. Just a couple. As in, a metric-butt ton of em.

    Echo2's Avatar
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    This is the article I first read about the process....




    The following rust removal setup work great for those pots that are really rusted up. I use this setup a couple of times a year when friends bring me their negelected cast iron and when I find a D.O at a yard sale or a thrift shop. This info is from a site that I sometimes visit, especially when I think I have found a really old piece of cast iron-mostly though it turns out the the piece just "looks" really old.


    Rust Reduction Electrolysis Setup

    Rust reduction via electrolysis is almost harder to say than it is to set up. While it appears to be a way to remove rust, it is actually a rust reduction method whereby hard red rust (ferrous oxide) is reduced to soft black rust (ferric oxide). There is not much to setting up an electrolysis bath and this simple process will produce spectacular results on rustiest, crustiest, carbon-caked cast iron utensils you can find. There are only four components necessary for the entire setup...

    1. A Battery Charger.
    While any charger will work, a 12-volt charger capable of 35 to 40 amps is ideal. A 6-volt charger or a trickle charger will work, but will be extremely slow.

    2. A non-conductive tu b or container.
    This is to hold the solution and must be non-metallic. A five gallon bucket, an old cooler, a Rubber-Maid tub, a plastic 55 gallon barrel, anything that will hold the rusty utensil will work.

    3. A non-conductive rack to hold the cast iron away from the anode. A plastic parts bin or dish rack will work nicely.

    4. A supply of Sodium Carbonate. This is to create an electrolyte solution that is capable of carrying the current created by the battery charger. Two readily available sources are "PH+" (a swimming pool additive available at Wal-Mart or any pool supply house), or "ARM and HAMMER WASHING SODA" (Not Baking SODA). This is a laundry detergent available at most grocery stores. It’s in a big yellow box just like the baking soda and is found with the Tide, Oxi-Clean, Clorox, etc... Use 1 Tablespoon per gallon of water in your container. This does not have to be an exact measurement. Another measurement is two handfuls per every five gallons. Make sure the soda is well dissolved in the water.

    5. Two chunks of metal. The one you want to clean and another you don’t. Any cast iron cooking utensil can be cleaned. Cooked on carbon, rusty, and the worse it is the better it will look. The other piece is technically called the anode. It is what we will be electroplating with the rust from our good piece. Just about anything metallic can be used for your anode. Re-bar, angle iron, coffee cans, shovels, cultivator sweeps, whatever you have handy. The ultimate is stainless steel as it will be less affected by the process, but don’t use your wife’s stainless steel potato masher without permission (voice of experience here). The larger the surface area of the anode and the more it surrounds the article to be cleaned the better. Try a coffee can with the lid flipped up and the side split and spread out. It makes an easy one to start with. Now comes the fun part.

    You must rig your setup in such a way so as to suspend the article to be cleaned next to but not touching the anode. Old dishwasher racks, bolts, c-clamps, bar clamps, duct tape, baling wire, let your imagination run wild. The desired result will have the anode secured and the part to be cleaned next to, above, or below it but again not touching. If something doesn’t look right, stick your hand in the water and straighten it out. The solution is harmless. Make sure it is secure enough so that a bump won’t tip something over. Now for the critical part... the red (positive) battery clamp must be attached to the anode (scrap piece), and the black (negative) clamp MUST be attached to the part to be cleaned!!!

    Now hook your red clamp to your scrap iron and the black clamp to your griddle. Make sure you have a good connection. Use copper wire and more clamps if you need to completely submerge your piece. If it will only partially fit in the tub, you can turn it over and do it in two or more sessions. There will be no lap marks. Try not to allow the red clamp to come into contact with the solution as it will be attacked by the process. The other (black lead) may come in contact with the solution but will have to be cleaned frequently.

    Now turn the charger on! If equipped the charger amp gauge will jump slightly. Bubbles should immediately start coming from around the iron pan. If not, check your connections. Make sure you have good metal to metal contact at all points. Let it run for an hour or so and check your results. Always turn off the charger before playing in the solution. If you don’t it will let you know. You will see a black coating on the cleaned part. This can be removed by an air compressor or by washing. Bare metal will lie underneath. The bubbling action is what cleans the cooked on carbon off. Sometimes it needs a little more time to clean. But this method is self-correcting in that you cannot over cook it. The clean metal will stay just the way it is and the crud will be removed. Let it cook for 6 or 8 hours and come back to it. The carbon will fall off. Polish it a bit with your favorite method if you want, but it is not necessary. Season it soon as it is extremely susceptible to rusting at this point. Now go show it off to your spouse.

    JUST A COUPLE WORDS OF CAUTION. The bubbles coming from the process are pure hydrogen. It is extremely flammable. Do not set it up by an open pilot light, and make sure you have some ventilation. Failure to do so will probably wind you up on the Darwin List.

    The solution will become rather ‘horrible’ looking in just a short time. But the solution will last forever. Only add water for whatever evaporates, as the sodium carbonate will stay suspended. When you can’t take the look anymore, simply dump it out in the yard. It is iron enriched laundry water at this point.

    Be ingenious with your setup. Try whatever seems right. Hook two anodes together with a copper wire and do two sides at once. Find something plastic to set your part in. Resurrect that old cooler with no lid and set it up. Hit the brakes hard and have your spouse grab that great looking piece of stainless in the barrow pit. Start buying those really rusty pieces of iron because you love the challenge. Try it once and you’ll never go back. And all that old iron will love you for it...
    The Difference Between a Welfare State and a Totalitarian State is a Matter of Time.

  8. #18
    This guy has "some" flashlights. Just a couple. As in, a metric-butt ton of em.

    Echo2's Avatar
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    I use a 55 gallon drum....a craftsman 40 amp charger....and suspend with 1/4" copper grounding wire.....rebar works for the sacrificial metal.

    Any one in the SW Va area is more than welcome to drop off some pieces they want done this way....I'll be doing some at the end of the month at my shop.

    I'll take pics of the setup and try to give some detailed instructions with the pics.
    The Difference Between a Welfare State and a Totalitarian State is a Matter of Time.

  9. #19
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    Willie51's Avatar
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    Hey folks, I was at wallymart in the hunting section and saw a Lodge 8 qt. camping dutch oven. It has the legs and lipped lid like Echos. It was on the bottom shelf and they only had one. It was $59.88 so I grabbed it....couldn't help myself.

  10. #20
    For the Love of Cats


    Sniper-T's Avatar
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    Here's a link to an old thread, there's some links to some recipes and another on the second page for a decently priced dealer

    http://www.shtfready.com/threads/754...ight=CAST+IRON
    Give a man fire, and he'll be warm for a day!
    Light a man on fire, and he'll be warm for the rest of his life!

    Cat's are food... not friends!

    If you're going to fight, then fight like you're the third monkey on the ramp into Noah's arc... and brother, it's starting to rain.

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