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  1. #1
    Quote Originally Posted by awerby View Post
    [Thanks for that, and please let us know how it works out for you. The information on that site is rather strange, though. Since aluminum has a Specific Gravity of 2.8 and steel has a SG of 7.8 I don't see how a furnace that holds 10 kg of steel at max can also hold 10 kg of aluminum. Maybe that "hotrolled cannabis cobalt" is having an effect...]
    Induction generators will have different rated capacities based on the metal intended to be melted.

    They sell the generator - its up to you to make the work coil and size the crucible, etc. - other than the one crucible and work coil it comes with which of course is a fixed size.

  2. #2
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    Quote Originally Posted by 3DTOPO View Post
    Induction generators will have different rated capacities based on the metal intended to be melted.

    They sell the generator - its up to you to make the work coil and size the crucible, etc. - other than the one crucible and work coil it comes with which of course is a fixed size.
    So it's not about the size, but the energy required to melt that amount of metal? It seems odd, then, that the same rig that will melt 30 kg of copper will only melt 10 kg of aluminum, which is a lot easier to melt. Or am I missing something?

  3. #3
    Quote Originally Posted by awerby View Post
    So it's not about the size, but the energy required to melt that amount of metal?
    Correct.

    Quote Originally Posted by awerby View Post
    It seems odd, then, that the same rig that will melt 30 kg of copper will only melt 10 kg of aluminum, which is a lot easier to melt. Or am I missing something?
    It is because while steel melts at much higher temperatures; aluminum conducts electricity much better than steel. When you heat metal with induction, you can essentially think of the work piece as being shorted out to your main. So the additional resistivity of steel allows more heat for the same amount of energy. Ferrous materials have an additional advantage too, in that they are heated by magnet eddy forces up to the currie temperature.

    So while it seems counterintuitive, induction generators actually heat ferrous materials easier.

    That said, one can use a conducive crucible (eg high purity graphite) and that is heated directly by the EM field and can be used to heat things that are both non-conductive and non-ferrous (eg you could melt glass). But in an ideal induction furnace, you want the metal to adsorb the energy directly; not the crucible.

    The more I learned about induction; the more surprises it has reveled!

    Last edited by 3DTOPO; 07-11-2016 at 04:02 PM.

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