Lead salvaging

I met a plumber who was contracted to change out the underground lead water pipes for a town. He had tons of pure lead pipe, perfect for casting soft bullets. I bought a lifetime supply for cheap.

When I want hard bullets I alloy them with the left over linotype that I purchased cheap from a small town printing press that never cleaned up their old stock when they switched to modern printing methods back in the 1980's. So plumbers and small town newspapers might be worth a look.

Batteries are very very toxic, the lead in them is oxidized and combined with other elements that makes them pretty much useless and dangerous so avoid smelting battery lead if you value your health. I would never use them as a source of lead for casting.
 
Sealed "service-free" batteries have calcium, arsenic and other nasty additives. Do not even try using them! I learned from reclaiming range scrap that fluxing is important to avoid losing antimony and arsenic as you proceed. I have a bunch of slag I am going to try to reintroduce into some pure lead as an experiment... I have had no luck ever getting free lead myself. It bothers me but oh well, if a tire shop or whatever even says no to cash or treats then there isn't much to do.
 
Sealed "service-free" batteries have calcium, arsenic and other nasty additives. Do not even try using them! I learned from reclaiming range scrap that fluxing is important to avoid losing antimony and arsenic as you proceed. I have a bunch of slag I am going to try to reintroduce into some pure lead as an experiment... I have had no luck ever getting free lead myself. It bothers me but oh well, if a tire shop or whatever even says no to cash or treats then there isn't much to do.

I use my "Float" process to reclaim more lead from my dross pile. With my dross I put a large amount/number of candles, cover this with pine shavings and let that sucker burn. Usually the liquid wax will float the impurities and let any heavy metal sink to the bottom.
 
I use my "Float" process to reclaim more lead from my dross pile. With my dross I put a large amount/number of candles, cover this with pine shavings and let that sucker burn. Usually the liquid wax will float the impurities and let any heavy metal sink to the bottom.

Interesting! That could work for me since I have quite a lot of dross to deal with.
 
a few years back during the low water season on the fraser a friend of ours with a jet boat took us up to the gravel bars where the previous year's sockeye and spring fishery took place. Thousands of anglers flock to those gravel bars in years when the river is open. We used a chain and a steel grapping hook kinda deal and you wouldnt believe the amount of gear we would pull up. The common lead weights used are 2, 2.5, 3 and 4 ounce round balls and we recovered an uncountable number of them.
I still have a 5 gallon bucket 1/2 full of old lead pulled up from the fraser.
Right now I am getting ready to melt 20 or 30 pounds to pour 2.5 , 3 and 4 ounce round balls in anticipation for that same fishery to open this year...... maybe.
I also have a good 100 pounds of old fishing lead without any alloys in it that I'll save in case I decide to cast for my .303 one day.
 
a few years back during the low water season on the fraser a friend of ours with a jet boat took us up to the gravel bars where the previous year's sockeye and spring fishery took place. Thousands of anglers flock to those gravel bars in years when the river is open. We used a chain and a steel grapping hook kinda deal and you wouldnt believe the amount of gear we would pull up. The common lead weights used are 2, 2.5, 3 and 4 ounce round balls and we recovered an uncountable number of them.
I still have a 5 gallon bucket 1/2 full of old lead pulled up from the fraser.
Right now I am getting ready to melt 20 or 30 pounds to pour 2.5 , 3 and 4 ounce round balls in anticipation for that same fishery to open this year...... maybe.
I also have a good 100 pounds of old fishing lead without any alloys in it that I'll save in case I decide to cast for my .303 one day.

We just waded out after the water dropped 2 or 3 feet. We called it the Fraser River grope.
Pull up any piece of line you felt, especially around bigger rocks where the weights would get stuck and broken off.
We still have a couple of ice cream buckets of weights we salvaged.
 
About 8 yrs ago me and a buddy got a 1200lb lead keel from a sailboat...Cost was...we had to dispose of the boat and tear it apart. Great score...however severely underestimated how difficult it is to cut up a lead block form. Basically had to torch it down into moveable chunks, then pick up melted slag, and then repeat the process again at home to get it all sorted into 1lb ingots and muffin tins. Took about 4 weekends and 5 propane tanks to process it all.

Because it was pure lead, had to order Tin and Antimony ingots from Amazon for casting range rounds and hardness. I keep 150lbs of pure lead for round balls and buckshot molds
 
Lots of youtube videos of how to neutralize acid with baking soda. I have done it a couple of times...but it is just not worth the effort (for me). However, it SHTF comes and lead sources get scare...there will be lots of batteries in abandoned cars.
What about lead out of batteries?

I'm not sure how you would safely reclaim it though.
 
The big problem with trying to get lead from modern car batteries are the other toxic chemicals in them like cadmium and Lord only knows what else. Not worth the potential health risks.

Auggie D
 
Here is one you may have luck with.
Find an air pistol/rifle club.
A family member belongs to one and I get 20lbs of pure lead once a year.

I get my harder lead from my gun club.
 
Range lead before the first melt is very dirty. I agree with that.

Once you have removed the wood, rubber, brass, stones, etc you get some good almost wheel weight hard lead.

I find the crap makes it's own fluxing.
 
About 8 yrs ago me and a buddy got a 1200lb lead keel from a sailboat...Cost was...we had to dispose of the boat and tear it apart. Great score...however severely underestimated how difficult it is to cut up a lead block form. Basically had to torch it down into moveable chunks, then pick up melted slag, and then repeat the process again at home to get it all sorted into 1lb ingots and muffin tins. Took about 4 weekends and 5 propane tanks to process it all.

Watching a YouTube video I was surprise to see someone cutting up a soft lead keel with a chainsaw. The failed attempt at making a keel for “Tally Ho”
 
A buddy of mine is getting out of casting and gave me a bunch of stuff he no longer needs. There was 32lb of ww ingots, about 1lb of pure tin, about 35lb of sorted wheel weights and this:

20220806-211549.jpg


20lb of linotype.

He also threw in an almost full container of Marvelux flux. I'll probably cast and PC a bunch of .38's for him.

Auggie D.
 
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