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Iron Smelt Vinderheima Apr 2008

Date: 13 April, 2008

Location: Vinderheima

Premise:

Experiment Notes - Econo-Norse Smelter in a can

Diameter:  20 cm Stack above Tuyure:  40 cm Tuyure Diameter:  1" (2.6 cm) I.D.
Tuyure Distance above floor:  25 cm Tuyure Angle:  20° Tuyure Penetration into stack (start/finish)  3 cm / N/A
The Team:

Leader Darrell Markewitz
Staff Ken Cook
Recorder Neil Peterson

Smelt_cd Reports of all of our iron smelting efforts along with more articles and information are available on the "Iron Smelting in the Viking Age" CD from the Wareham Forge.  Copies of the CD can be purchased here.
Smelt Totals
Total Charcoal 30 Kg Weight of Bloom 2 Kg Total Elapsed Time: 4:30
Total Ore 18 Kg (15.8 Kg dry) Weight of Slag:   Bloom Quality  
Discussion:

The idea was to build a more durable version of the dependable Econo Norse firebrick smelter. The drum was just about exactly the same size as a hexagon arrangement of standard hard bricks - stacked the normal three sets tall. The result is a smelter containment that is roughly 20 cm internal diameter, but still at the normal plus 40 cm above the tuyere. The smaller diameter means that 2 buckets of charcoal (4 Kg) will fill the smelter rather than the usual 4 buckets (8 Kg). This means we want to target a slower burn rate (16 min / bucket) to maintain the contact time for the ore.

This smelt was to be a second test of the DARC Dirt 1 - bog iron ore analog developed by Gus Gissing. The first test (at Smeltfest 08) was not ideal, as the smelter layout was a new type we had little experience with. The dynamics of the 'bellows plate' type furnace, and its taller stack height combined to a low yield and very high carbon bloom. In this case the mix of 80% 'Spanish Red' (Fe2O3) / 10% silica sand / 10% flour had been air drying for about a week. The cold and wet weather had slowed this process. At the time of the smelt the ore material was dry enough to easily handle, but still slightly damp to the touch. It was broken up from the large plate pieces (roughly 1 cm thick) by tapping through a 2.5 cm wire grid with a wooden mallet. A second screen, about 3 mm, was used to separate out the fine dust. (This step was not done for the Smeltfest test). The result was pulling off about 20 % of the prepared material as dust. As the analog was not baked this time, this dust can easily be incorporated into the next batch by just adding water. It was generally thought that the pieces from the 2.5 cm grid may have been a bit too large. Use of a 1.5 cm grid is likely ideal.

The extraction was from the bottom of the furnace, which had been constructed with a proportionally large tab arch. As it turned out, there was a reasonably large slag block formed. The bloom proved properly positioned, and contained within the correct pool of liquid slag. With a bit of hammering, it was possible to break away the side of the slag and grab out the bloom.

The bloom was both smaller and less dense than I had hoped for. The yield is a bit better than it looks at first glance. We baked dry a measured sample of the ore analog, and it was found to contain 12 % water. This puts the 'real' weight of ore used at closer to 15.8 kg. This gives us a yield of about 13%. Still lower than our usual, but enough that the DARC Dirt 1 analog is worthy of further testing. There is still a very large mass of hardened slag to break free of the interior of the furnace. This may prove to have other smaller masses of metal contained in it. Certainly it would appear that there is a larger proportion of slag formed than has been seen in past uses of the larger brick furnaces with other ore types.

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Overview of the smelter Smelter in action Finished (compacted) bloom pieces


CLOCK ELAPSED EVENT AIR     CHARCOAL     ORE  
            UNIT COUNT TOTAL COUNT TOTAL
      gage LpM P bucket   kg   kg
                2    
12:00   start wood splints pre-heat                
12:45 :45 gentle air                
13:15   burn to natural base @ - 15 cm                
13:17 1:17 1st addition rough charcoal 4   2 1        
13:23   fill to tuyere, ensure still lit                
13:25 1:25 fill with rough charcoal                
                     
12:00   start main smelt sequence 54 * 450            
12:10 0:10 start adding first charocal                
12:20 0:10 rough charcoal       1 1 2    
12:35 0:15 rough charcoal       1 2 4    
12:49 0:14 switch to graged fuel       1 3 6    
13:05 0:16         1 4 8    
13:20   adjust air (reduce) 49 400 6          
13:21 0:16         1 5 10    
13:32 0:11         1 6 12    
13:39   start first ore addition                
13:45 0:16         1 7 14 1 1
13:55 0:10         1 8 16 1 2
13:59   air reduced   365            
14:11 0:12         1 9 18 2 4
14:27 0:16         1 10 20 2 6
14:41 0:14         1 11 22 2 8
14:58 0:17         1 12 24 2 10
15:12 0:14         1 13 26 2 12
15:26 0:14         1 14 28 2 14
15:43 0:17         1 15 30 2 16
16:00 0:17         1 16 32 2 18
16:14 0:14 start burn down       1 17 34    
                     
16:35   extraction                
                     
    TOTALS                
                     
    Time 4.5 hrs            
    Ore 18 kg            
    Charcoal 34 + kg            
                     
    Bloom 2 kg            
    Yield 11 %            
                     
    Slag 4.3 kg            
    Gromps 0.7 kg            
    Total output recovered 7 kg            


Smelt_cd Reports of all of our iron smelting efforts along with more articles and information are available on the "Iron Smelting in the Viking Age" CD from the Wareham Forge.  Copies of the CD can be purchased here.
      Updated: August 24 2017 07:56:57.
Text © Darrell Markewitz, 2017
Photographs © Darrell Markewitz, 2017
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