1

I am trying to build a foundry. The Youtube video refers to 4:1 Perlite:Fire Cement. But the shop also offers Fire Concrete. I don't know what's the difference.

Could someone please explain the difference?

Link to the video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tTPdybtO-a0

  • I've not used either in any of my brews. Is this a brewing question? –  Sep 19 '12 at 11:29
  • 1
    It's a "casting metal" or "foundry building" question. I couldn't use the tags "foundry" "casting" because the site didn't let me. ... Oooh, wait .. "homebrewing" as in "beer brewing" and not in "homebrewing equipment" ... This is .. embarrassing :( –  Sep 19 '12 at 11:55
  • Can you insert a link to the video? If you don't have the rep, paste the url as a comment, and one of us will do it for you. – Chris Cudmore Sep 19 '12 at 13:11

1 Answers1

7

TLDR; - Concrete is poured into a form, for structural members. Cement is spread as a glue.

Cement is a glue. Concrete is a mix of aggregates, held together with cement.

If you're building something structural (to support a load -- such as itself), you'd buy the concrete. If you're using it as a skim/finish coat, or to attach firebrick, buy the cement, and (possibly) mix it with some very fine aggregates - depending on the use.

See this answer for more detail on cement/concrete in general. What actually happens if I vary proportions of cement and sand in mortar?

EDIT: After seeing the video, I now understand. What you are making is a light, weak concrete using the cement and perlite as an aggregate. You need to buy the fire cement, not the concrete. (You could use concrete and omit the perlite, but I think it would be pretty heavy.)

Chris Cudmore
  • 14,129
  • 7
  • 59
  • 89
  • Thank you! What will be more temperature resistant as I don't want to melt aluminium but brass and bronze which has a higher melting point than aluminium. – Jan Krüger Sep 19 '12 at 18:06
  • I think the perlite mix will be better insulated. It might keep the outside a bit cooler. – Chris Cudmore Sep 19 '12 at 18:07