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Can you see the “sand and grit” inclusions in the lead you bought? If so, you ran across a vendor who is unusually uncaring about his product and customers’ satisfaction. I empty my pot after casting into an ingot mould and generally it’s only the last partial ingot that has any impurities in it. Even then, most of the crud is a gray-to-black powder that falls out of the pot after the lead is out. Just at a guess from your description, I would say that you are casting too hot. I don’t know how accurate the Lyman thermometer I use is, but the range I cast at shows 700-750 degrees. This temperature gives me a shiny surface after fluxing, with an increasing amount of silver-gray oatmeal on the top as casting progresses. I push this aside when I fill the dipper, and generally that’s all I have to do when casting large bullets until the lead level is too low for the dipper. I have little experience with a bottom-pour pot, and that mostly casting small or pistol bullets in multicavity moulds. My old Organic Chemistry professor told us that whenever you melt something, there is decomposition. In the case of lead, the decomposition is oxidation. Lead oxides will keep taking up oxygen, forming a yellow monoxide (litharge) a red dioxide (red lead, or minium) and a number of increasingly oxidized species from lead peroxide through more highly oxidized (and more poorly characterized) oxides, that go in color from brown to gray to black. The stirring of the pot, both in fluxing and ladling, with the heat in the walls of the pot, will ensure that there is a deposit of these oxides on the pot below the surface, as well as on top of the melt. Depending on temperature and casting style, people will see “rust” forming in their pots, though without any associated pitting. This is likely the red-lead oxide, perhaps stayed at this point by whatever fluxing technique is used. The yellow litharge color can also be a temporary or more persistent impurity. I’ve seen all these colors, but I’ve found that proper fluxing at the temperatures I cast at always results in a shiny surface and a couple tablespoons worth of charcoal-gray-to-black powder, which are the oxides produced by that particular melt. So I would recommend preheating your mould, running at a lower temperature, scraping the sides and bottom of the pot when you flux, skimming off the black dust on top, and seeing what happens then.
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