Week 4 - Permanent Mold - Die and Centrifugal Casting Processes
Week 4 - Permanent Mold - Die and Centrifugal Casting Processes
Week 4 - Permanent Mold - Die and Centrifugal Casting Processes
❑Shell molding
❑ Vacum Molding
Steps: (1) A Metal pattern is heated and placed over a box containing sand mixed with
thermosetting resin
SHELL MOLDING STEPS
The box is inverted so that sand and resin The box is positioned to the previous
mixture fall on the hot pattern, causing a stage, so that loose uncured particles
layer of the mixture to cure on the drop away
pattern surface to form a hard shell
❑ The mold is made of plaster of Paris with the addition of talc and silica flour
to improve strength and to control the time required for the plaster to set.
Disadvantages
Moisture must be removed
Plaster can not resist high temperatures. Therefore low melting moint
alloys could be casted.
INVESTMENT CASTING
Stator from investment casting
INVESTMENT CASTING
PERMANENT-MOLD CASTING PROCESSES
❑In these processes, molds are used repeatedly and the casting part can be
easily removed
❑ Core mades of metal or sand aggregate are plasced in the mold prior to
casting
❑ In order to increase the life of permanent molds, the surfaces of the mold
cavity are coated with a refractory slurry or sprayed with graphite every few
castings.
❑ This process is used mostly for aluminum, magnesium, copper alloys and gray
iron because of their generally lower melting points.
THE STEPS IN PERMANENT MOLD PROCESS
❑ The molds are coated or sprayed to aid heat dissipation and separate of the product
❑ After solidification, the molds are opened and the part is removed
ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES OF PERMANENT MOLD
PROCESS
❑ This process is used mostly for aluminum, magnesium, copper alloys and gray iron because of their generally
lower melting points
Advantages:
Disadvantages:
Disadvantages
❑ Equipment costs are high
❑ The dimensions of the manufactured part are limited in this process
CENTRIFUGAL CASTING
❑ In this method, the mold is rotated at high speed so that the molten metal is
distributed by the centrifugal force to the outer regions of the die cavity
b) Semicentrifugal casting
c) Centrifuging
TRUE CENTRIFUGAL CASTING
❑ Molten metal is poured into a horizontal rotating mold at one end.
❑ The high speed rotation results in centrifugal forces that cause the metal to
take the shape of the mold cavity.
❑ The outside shape of the casting can be non-round, but inside shape of the
casting is perfectly round.
❑ Pipes, gun barrels, tubes, rings and bushings are manufactured by this process
SEMICENTRIFUGAL CASTING
CENTRIFUGING
• In centrifuging, mold cavities of any shape are placed at a certain distance
from the axis of rotation. The molten metal is poured from the center and is
forced into the mold by centrifugal forces.