Casting Visual Inspection
Casting Visual Inspection
Casting Visual Inspection
Casting
The six basic steps in making sand castings are, (i) Pattern making, (ii) Core
making, (iii) Moulding, (iv) Melting and pouring, (v) Cleaning
• Pattern: Replica of the part to be cast and is used to prepare the mould
cavity. It is the physical model of the casting used to make the mould. Made
of either wood or metal.
• The mould is made by packing some readily formed aggregate material, such
as moulding sand, surrounding the pattern. When the pattern is withdrawn, its
imprint provides the mold cavity. This cavity is filled with metal to become the
casting
• Melting and Pouring The preparation of molten metal for casting is referred to
simply as melting. The molten metal is transferred to the pouring area where
the molds are filled.
• Cleaning involves removal of sand, scale, and excess metal from the casting
Sand Casting Process
Pattern Design Considerations
Shrinkage allowance
Machining allowance
Distortion allowance
Parting line
Draft angle
Typical Shrinkage Allowance
Metal or alloy Shrinkage allowances
mm / m
Aluminum alloy
Aluminum bronze
Yellow brass (thick sections)
Yellow brass (thin sections)
Gray cast iron (a)
White cast iron
Tin bronze
Gun metal
Lead
Magnesium
Magnesium alloys (25%)
Manganese bronze
Copper-nickel
Nickel
Phosphor bronze
Carbon steel
Chromium steel
Manganese steel
Tin
Zinc
Typical Pattern Machining
Allowance
Allowances, mm
Pattern size, mm Bore Surface Cope side
For cast irons
Taper
Mold
cavity
Cope
Riser
Core
Flask Sprue
Parting Runner
line
Drag Gate
Shell mould casting
- Metal, 2-piece pattern, 175°C-370°C
- Coated with a lubricant (silicone)
- Mixture of sand, thermoset resin/epoxy
- Cure (baking)
- Remove patterns, join half-shells mold
- Pour metal
- Solidify (cooling)
- Break shell part
Expendable Mold Casting
- Styrofoam pattern
- dipped in refractory slurry dried
- sand (support)
- pour liquid metal
- foam evaporates, metal fills the shell
- cool, solidify
- break shell part
Plaster-Mould, Ceramic-Mould casting
Intricate geometry
Close dimensional tolerance
Superior surface finish
High-melting point alloys
Vacuum casting
- Permanent mold
- Rotated about its axis at 300 ~ 3000 rpm
- Molten metal is poured
Permanent Good finish, low porosity, high Costly mold, simpler gears, gear housings
mold production rate shapes only
Die Excellent dimensional accuracy, costly dies, small parts, gears, camera bodies,
high production rate non-ferrous metals car wheels
Centrifugal Large cylindrical parts, good Expensive, few shapes pipes, boilers,
quality flywheels
Casting Design: Typical casting defects
Casting Design: Defects and Associated Problems
σmax
2a
2b
σ0
Casting Design: Guidelines
Sand casting
‧Tolerance (0.7~2 mm) and defects are affected by shrinkage
‧Material property is inherently poor
‧Generally have a rough grainy surface
Investment casting
‧Tolerance (0.08~0.2 mm)
‧Mechanical property and microstructure depends on the
method
‧Good to excellent surface detail possible due to fine slurry
Die casting
‧Tolerance (0.02~0.6 mm)
‧Good mechanical property and microstructure due to high
‧pressure
‧Excellent surface detail
Flexibility - Casting
Sand casting
‧High degree of shape complexity (limited by pattern)
Investment casting
‧Ceramic and wax cores allow complex internal
configuration but costs increase significantly
Die casting
‧Low due to high die modification costs
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Casting Quality
Ceroxide
Gas Porosity
Surface Texture A1 A2 A3 A4
Mon-metallic Inclusions B1 B2 B4 B5
Gas Porosity C1 C2 C3 C4
Fusion Discontinuities - D1 D2 D5
Expansion Discontinuities - - E3 E5
Inserts - - F1 F3
Metal Removal Marks (Thermal
G1 G2 G3 G5
Dressing)
Metal Removal Marks (Mechanical
H1 H3 H4 H5
Dressing)
A1 A2
A3 A4
NON-METALLIC INCLUSIONS
B1 B2
B3 B4
GAS POROSITY
C1 C2
C3 C4
FUSION DISCONTINUITIES
D1 D2
D5 D4
EXPANSION DISCONTINUITIES
E3 E5
INSERTS
F1 F3
METAL REMOVAL MARKS - THERMAL DRESSING
G1 G2
G3 G5
METAL REMOVAL MARKS (MECHANICAL DRESSING)
H1 H3
H4 H5
METAL REMOVAL MARKS (MECHANICAL DRESSING)
J1 J2
J3 J4
Inspection Steps