3475331
3475331
3475331
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Sand Casting
Plaster Mould Casting
Investment Casting
Shell Molding
Die Casting
Sand Casting
Sand casting is the simplest method of casting aluminum. Sand is made
into a mould by forming around a wooden "pattern". The pattern is
removed, the sand mould assembled and molten metal pored in. The
process is chosen for small production runs, for complex shape
castings requiring intricate cores or for very large castings.
Advantages
Low equipment costs
Largest size of castings possible by any casting method
suited to complex shapes and cores
Very low gas porosity is possible
It is a versatile casting process
Limitations
Low casting rate
3-5mm minimum wall thickness
Poor linear dimensional tolerances e.g. 4mm / m
Rough surface finish
Coarse grain size compared to die casting
Casting weights in the range of 0.1 Kg - 100,000 Kg
Approximate economical quantity range 1 - 1000 castings.
Investment Casting
This casting method involves producing a "wax
pattern" by injecting wax or plastic into a
pattern die. The pattern is attached to gating
and runner systems and this assembly is
dipped in a hard setting refractory slurry,
which is then cured. The pattern is melted
out of the mould to leave an exact cavity. The
mould is heated to cure the refractory and to
volatolize the remaining wax pattern
material. The moulds are baked and molten
metal is poured into the mould cavity. On
solidification of the casting, the mould
material is broken away from the castings.
Shell Moulding
A shell mould consists of a sand shell, varying in thickness
between 4-10 mm. The sand particles are bonded
together with phenolic resins giving a permeable mould.
The production of shell moulds may be automated which
lends itself to medium to high production runs. The resin
coated sand is placed on a hot metal pattern; this is fired
in an oven to harden the shell. After cooling, the shell is
removed from the pattern and is ready for use. Molten
metal is then poured into the shell mould cavity and
allowed to cool. The mould material is broken off the
casting. Better dimensioned tolerances are possible than
with sand moulding, which reduces machining costs. Fine
surface finishes equal to that of permanent moulds
(12~130 rms) may be obtained. and consistently
reproducible thin castings with fine detail may be made.
The process is more costly than sand, permanent mould
or die casting.
Die Casting
Liquid metal is introduced in metallic molds!
The injection of metal could be:
1. Under influence of high hydraulic pressure
with the die loaded on machine (HPDC).
2. Under influence of low pneumatic pressure
with the die loaded on machine (LPDC).
3. Under influence of Gravity (Poured by
hand) in a stationary mold, called GDC.
4. Under influence of Gravity (Poured by
hopper) in a tilted mold and subsequently
straightened, called Durville Process
Dosing
Start
Evacuation
Turbulence-free filling
Additional measures
Valve closing
Intensification
Rp0,2
120-150 Mpa
Rm
>180 Mpa
A5
>15%
Typical vacuum
die cast parts
BUT
It is an energy
intensive process
Continuous energy
input is a
PREREQUISITE!
And Energy is
going to be ever
COSTLIER!
Aluminum
is the most widely used
metal for die casting!
This is because:
It responds well to mold filling
It is light in weight
Its thermal properties are excellent
Its engineering strength is
comparable with steel.
It is non-corrosive hence longer
functional life.
BUT
At higher temperature it has:
Initial cost of
equipment to melt and
hold liquid metal is
high!
Investment is
called for in
Quality Assurance
and Energy Saving
Activities!
Because
Casting process is carried out on machine.
Modern machines are equipped with strict
casting parameter controls.
Strength of castings, thus produced, is high.
Rejection is least.
Any deviation from set parameters is reported
by audio signal and further production is
halted.
Deviation report is available on
microprocessor hence quick rectification.
BUT
It does not accept any collapsible mold (e.g. Sand
Cores)
Each machine is designed for a specific range of
casting size!
Larger castings cannot be made on a smaller
machine size.
Smaller castings can be manufactured on larger
machine size using multi-cavity mold scheme.
Multi-cavity mold scheme is justified for large and
constant quantum off-take.
Such machines are costly!
Levels required of plant cleanliness and tool &
machine maintenance are high.
Some facts
Modern Casting Purchasers
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Market Prospects
HPDC Castings are mainly
consumed all over the world by:
1. Automobile Industry
2. Electrical & Electronic Industry
3. Communication Industry (Mobile
Phones, Laptop Bodies, etc.)
Initial
Investment!!!
Conclusion
Advantages
High productivity
High dimensional accuracy
Good surface; polishable
Near net shape
High strength of the surface
layer
Inserts, composites casting
well
realizable
Very economical with large
Disadvantages
Pore-free structure difficult to
produce
High investment costs
Limited freedom in design
Low elongation
Castings only limited heat
treatable and weldable
Decorative coatings
almost impossible
When
Good luck!
Conventional
die castingdie
The conventional
casting is one of the most
economical casting process
Venting slots
Dosing of metal
from the top
Die filling
real-time controlled
Die opening
ejection of die casting