by Chad » Thu Apr 14, 2011 1:50 am
Lead melts just over 600 degrees F, and starts to emit increasingly dangerous fumes above about 1700 degrees F, and boils around 3100 F. It is very hard to get to 1700 degrees F, and you shouldn't try to.
Don't sand the lead- use a power planer, a block plane, a course rasp, or a surform tool. The idea is to make shavings, not dust. I wear a good dust mask for this stuff, not a respirator, but that's me. I'm making dust (at worst), not fumes, is how I see it. Clean your work area when you're done, and wash your hands before eating, smoking, or picking your nose.
LOTS of folks cast lead for hobbies and work (fishing weights, typesetters, etc.), so it's not like handling nuclear waste. My area has a hazardous waste collection facility that takes the leftovers, no problem. Sure, if you ask somebody at your local city government what you should do, they're probably going to overreact since lead is such a buzz word these days. Solid lead is vastly different than lead paint.
There's plenty of good info on the interweb about playing safely with lead. Basically it says don't boil it, and don't eat it.