Cadaola Posted April 12, 2013 Report Share Posted April 12, 2013 Hi! I know that warming up cast plaster (about 40 -60 °C) will make evaporate the water added and make reusable the plaster for new castings. Does anyone has already made such operation? Is it advisable to do? I did some molders, but they did not result well, so I have to throw them away, but it's a waste! Thanks for any advice! Cheers, Paola Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
perkolator Posted April 15, 2013 Report Share Posted April 15, 2013 yes, it's completely possible to infinitely recycle plaster - but it's not really practical. you will have to figure out how to crush and mill the solids down to a powder (and you'll never get a consistent powder like commercial plaster), then there is the question of the integrity of the plaster assuming you have success in recycling it. you can do some research on the hemihydrate/dihydrate state of plaster, and how to achieve it. i think you need to hold the plaster above 300*F for a long period of time. personally i'd rather just spend $20 vs wasting hours of my time, but that's just me! good luck and let us know if you try it out! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
perkolator Posted April 16, 2013 Report Share Posted April 16, 2013 cool plaster recycling thing i was just reminded of -- in Lincoln, CA, there is Gladding McBean, which is one of the only remaining ceramic sewer pipe factories in the USA - which is cool on its own out of pure awesomeness......anyways - since construction hadn't been doing so hot in the past, the factory also makes tons of replications of stone building facades for buildings in big cities (like filigree and gargoyles, etc. that you see in SF, NY). for consistency, they take plaster molds of all these pieces before cranking one out. the molds are all kept in cataloged storage for any future repeat use. now the cool part - for every "production grade" mold they take, there are possibly several molds that got scrapped and they have to do something with....outside in their yard are 2-3 "piles" of baseball-size chunks of cured plaster. piles are roughly 15+ feet tall and maybe 30+ ft diameter (the size pile you see at the end of a conveyor moving dirt, i guess). the material gets loaded up and they truck it down to San Diego, where it gets turned into gypsum board/drywall. pretty cool, right? some pretty nifty recycling IMO. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cadaola Posted April 17, 2013 Author Report Share Posted April 17, 2013 Thank you for your answers. I'm not going to recycle the plaster myself, but I will try to find out if there is someone nearby that recycle it in a way or another, so I don't have to throw it away.;)src="http://ceramicartsdaily.org/community/public/style_emoticons/default/wink.gif"> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
perkolator Posted April 18, 2013 Report Share Posted April 18, 2013 GMB does not sell ANYTHING to the public, especially now that they are owned by Pacific Coast Building Products. Sorry to hear that they treated you so badly, but I'm sure you can imagine how many calls they get monthly regarding buying clay, sewer pipes, using their beehive or shuttle kilns, touring the facility, etc. They used to open the factory up every year to tours, during the Feats of Clay show - but no longer do this, even for people "in the know" who've been involved with them for decades. FYI, the clay they use is a Lincoln Fire Clay based body for most of the work they produce, since they have a huge clay pit down the road. I know they make their own chunky grog (like 1/8" chunky) from all the reject sewer pipes (I think the factory might even be L.E.E.D. certified since they recycle EVERYTHING, I only mentioned the reject plaster pile - you should see the reject greenware and fired clay piles!!!) - which I'm sure helps tremendously for making the thick work they produce. All the pipes are extruded under crazy amts of pressure for uniformity! I'm sure there's some other clays in the body, like kaolin and ball clays. Not sure if they need any flux/feldspars in the body at the temps they are firing to, but I'm sure there is some in there. They have a laboratory on-site with employees who only work on clay bodies and glazes formulation/testing. I'm actually supposed to be heading out to Lincoln on May 18th, as I was invited to carve sewer pipes during Clay Fest/Lincoln Clay Day. As far as I know, it's the ONLY way to get your hands on a leather-hard sewer pipe and some of their raw clay -- they only do it for this one day a year, for one local artist's ceramics class (Ray Gonzales, who helped start Feats of Clay). If I remember, I will try to ask Ray if he knows anything more about the clay body. If he doesn't know, I can ask Eric at Sacramento IMCO, since they might buy all the other materials through them. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AlbertLoy Posted April 27, 2013 Report Share Posted April 27, 2013 I was not knowing about this.Its good I came across this forum.Recycling is very important these days and this is really a very good way of recycling. Retaining wall Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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