A spin caster will work for brass, silver, gold, pewter, etc. But, steel casting is another animal entirely, and needs done by a foundry set up to do it. I have a centrifugal casting machine, wax injector, mold making frames, etc to do production casting. For the easy metals, investment plaster is enough for the mold. For steel, they use ceramic shell casting techniques, where the initial mold is created by dipping the wax in a liquid ceramic that forms a hard, slick shell. That is repeated until a satisfactory thickness is achieved, and then that is usually further encased in another setting plaster investment. I think most steel casting is done with gravity feed, or maybe with vacuum assist rather than with centrifugal. Because of that, it needs sprued and treed differently than jewelry metals. It's usually best to give the foundry the waxes, and let them sprue it up for the casting, as they know what their process needs. For what it's worth, I've had good luck using plastic instead of wax for models. I've done that for preprinted letters, numbers, etc. as well as some shapes of items I've found in plastic that I wanted in metal. It may be possible to 3d print models from a 3D program like solidworks, and then use those for the "wax" for the cast. That would be an easy way to proportionally size up for the shrinkage. I've even had pretty good luck with some light woods like cedar and balsa, as long as I was real careful to shake out the ashes from the investment mold after I burned out the model. I've got a correction to what I posted earlier on shrinkage of steel. Doing some research online, it appears that a shrinkage of about 2% is typical for steel. Some additional is lost due to surface finishing loss. Brass is about half of that, so if you do a check piece in brass and modify that for your mold master, keep that in mind.
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