Commercially pure iron powder has been processed by the capacitor electrical discharge
consolidation technique. This consolidation technique applies an external pressure and, at the same
time, heats a metallic powder mass by the Joule effect of a high-voltage and high-intensity electric
current. In this work, a capacitor charged at low voltage has been used instead. The effect of
the initial porosity of the Fe powder mass, i.e., of the precompaction pressure, and the number of
discharges from the capacitor have been studied. The densification and remaining porosity, the
sintering level, the Vickers microhardness, and the electrical resistivity of the sintered compacts have
been studied. Compacts sintered by the conventional powder metallurgy route of cold pressing
and furnace sintering were also prepared for comparison. Results show that a high initial porosity
provides a high electrical resistance in the powder column, a necessary requisite for the Joule
effect to increase densification with the number of discharges. Thus, the final porosity decreases to
0.22 after 50 discharges in the powder mass with an initial porosity of 0.30. With this initial porosity,
the sintering process increases Vickers microhardness from 29 to 51 HV10 and decreases the electrical
resistivity of the powder mass from 3.53 × 10−2
to 5.38 × 10−4 Ω·m. An initial porosity of 0.2 does not
make the compacts densify, but a certain bond between particles is attained, increasing microhardness
and decreasing electrical resistivity as the number of discharges increases. Lower initial porosities
make the powder mass behave as an electrical conductor with no appreciable changes even after
50 electrical discharges