Sand Casting
Sand Casting
Sand Casting
Faculty of Engineering
Sand Casting
March 2008
Sand casting
Sand casting is a method involving pouring a molten metal into a sand
mold.
The set of channels through which a molten metal flows to the mold
cavity is called gating system.
Air within the mold cavity and gases formed when a molten metal
contacts the mold surface are removed through the vents.
A mold frame (flask) consists of two parts: cope (the upper part) and
drag (the lower part).
A mold cavity is formed in the process of pattern molding, when the
pattern (commonly wooden) is embedded in sand in the flask forming an
impression of the casting.
After the sand packing the pattern is removed from the flask and the
cores and the gating system are arranged.
Cores, runner and gates are arranged in the drag; pouring cap and
sprue are placed in the cope.
Then the two parts of the mold are assembled and poured.
After the metal has solidified and cooled to a desired temperature, the
casting is removed from the mold by the process called shakeout.
Patterns
The cavity in the sand is formed by using a pattern (an approximate
duplicate of the real part), which are typically made out of wood,
sometimes metal. The cavity is contained in an aggregate housed in a
box called the flask. Core is a sand shape inserted into the mold to
produce the internal features of the part such as holes or internal
passages. Cores are placed in the cavity to form holes of the desired
shapes. Core print is the region added to the pattern, core, or mold that
is used to locate and support the core within the mold. A riser is an
extra void created in the mold to contain excessive molten material. The
purpose of this is feed the molten metal to the mold cavity as the molten
metal solidifies and shrinks, and thereby prevents voids in the main
casting.
The cavity is usually made oversize to allow for the metal contraction as
it cools down to room temperature. This is achieved by making the
pattern oversize. To account for shrinking, the pattern must be made
oversize by these factors, on the average. These are linear factors and
apply in each direction. These shrinkage allowance are only
approximate, because the exact allowance is determined the shape and
size of the casting. In addition, different parts of the casting might
require a different shrinkage allowance. See the casting allowance table
for the approximate shrinkage allowance expressed as the Pattern
Oversize Factor.