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tailchaser

Lead Pot Leaking..

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Quick question, I have one of the LEE production pots, and i have a big problem with it dripping between pours, i have 3 or 4 different plungers that i clean and change out, i twist the plunger, i make sure the handle comes completely down, i flux the lead, i use good lead, but after a few pours it will start dripping.. is there anything i can do??

please help, i am tired of the little burns ....

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I don't have a solution for you as mine leaks sometimes as well. It looks like your plunger is not seating itself in the hole. You can empty the lead out of the pot and take a look to see if there is anything stuck around the hole where the plunger sits. I do this about every 2 years where I will empty my pot and steel wool the plunger, plunger hole and pot wall. You can also send it back to Lee and they will take a look at it and tell you if there is something else wrong with it.Other than that all you can do is put a small can under the pot when you're not pouring.

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I don't have a solution for you as mine leaks sometimes as well. It looks like your plunger is not seating itself in the hole. You can empty the lead out of the pot and take a look to see if there is anything stuck around the hole where the plunger sits. I do this about every 2 years where I will empty my pot and steel wool the plunger, plunger hole and pot wall. You can also send it back to Lee and they will take a look at it and tell you if there is something else wrong with it.Other than that all you can do is put a small can under the pot when you're not pouring.

I just bought a new lee melter and my old one started leaking after a pour I would push on the handle some and the spout would seal. I noticed that if I left it on for extended periods that it would leak more. I finally drained all the lead out and remelted and it worked fine. You might have some contaminates in the lead also.

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for the short term, keep a screwdriver handy and turn the slot on top of the stop rod and that should stop the drip until you make another pour....sometimes a weight on top will help "seal" the leak between pours, often it is a slight piece of crud causing the stopper to hang up and it will eventually fix itself. Often the amount of lead alloy in the pot will matter, more means more drip (bigger head) and even pot temp can make a difference. I occasionally drain and clean the interior well, spray with mould release and often that works well including treating the end of the stop rod with release. Getting into the habit of the slight turning of the rod after a pour will become second nature. Keep an ingot mold under the spout or at least something to catch the drips and return the drips to the pot (I always have a set of needle nose pliers handy too) Welcome to the world of the Lee bottom pour. My pot is 12 years and going strong....has melted hundreds of pounds of alloy.

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for the short term, keep a screwdriver handy and turn the slot on top of the stop rod and that should stop the drip until you make another pour....sometimes a weight on top will help "seal" the leak between pours, often it is a slight piece of crud causing the stopper to hang up and it will eventually fix itself. Often the amount of lead alloy in the pot will matter, more means more drip (bigger head) and even pot temp can make a difference. I occasionally drain and clean the interior well, spray with mould release and often that works well including treating the end of the stop rod with release. Getting into the habit of the slight turning of the rod after a pour will become second nature. Keep an ingot mold under the spout or at least something to catch the drips and return the drips to the pot (I always have a set of needle nose pliers handy too) Welcome to the world of the Lee bottom pour. My pot is 12 years and going strong....has melted hundreds of pounds of alloy.

mine drips as well..... I do the screw driver trick also its like cz said just part of the fun of using a lee bottom pour...

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1) Screwdriver trick turning the top screw

2) Bounce the handle a couple of times

3) Empty your pot, take it apart and clean the bottom spout with a torch head cleaning kit.

or

4) Wear gloves, live with it and keep a ingot mold underneath you pot like I do.

I usually pour 400-500 jigs at a time and just don't waste the time cleaning it.

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Your pot is leaking because your plunger is slightly out of plumb, leaning slightly to the left or right at the top. Use a screwdriver in the slot at the top of your plunger to slightly turn and straighten your plunger to the plumb position.

Your owners manual will tell you to never hit your plunger to stop a leak... but it doesn't tell you about why it leaks.

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Your pot is leaking because your plunger is slightly out of plumb, leaning slightly to the left or right at the top. Use a screwdriver in the slot at the top of your plunger to slightly turn and straighten your plunger to the plumb position.

Your owners manual will tell you to never hit your plunger to stop a leak... but it doesn't tell you about why it leaks.

Turn your heat up.

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Turn your heat up.

Is 9 1/2 high enough???

I use a hardball mix from rotometals that requires a very high heat because of the 4% antimony in the mix and don't have leaking problems when I keep the plunger plumb.

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