MP - Module 1 - Casting Processes
MP - Module 1 - Casting Processes
MP - Module 1 - Casting Processes
Applications
• It seems particularly suited to steel castings of less than 10 kg.
• Parts made using shell molding include gears, valve bodies,
bushings, and camshafts.
Vacuum Molding
• Vacuum molding, also called the V-process.
• It uses a sand mold held together by vacuum pressure rather than
by a chemical binder.
• The term vacuum in this process refers to the making of the mold
rather than the casting operation itself.
• As no binders are used, the sand is readily recovered in vacuum
molding.
• Since no water is mixed with the sand, moisture related defects
are absent from the product.
• It is relatively slow and not readily adaptable to mechanization
Steps in vacuum molding
Steps in vacuum molding
(1) a thin sheet of preheated plastic is drawn over a match-plate or
cope-and-drag pattern by vacuum—the pattern has small vent
holes to facilitate vacuum forming;
(2) A specially designed flask is placed over the pattern plate and
filled with sand, and a sprue and pouring cup are formed in the
sand;
(3) another thin plastic sheet is placed over the flask, and a vacuum
is drawn that causes the sand grains to be held together, forming a
rigid mold.
(4) the vacuum on the mold pattern is released to permit the pattern
to be stripped from the mold;
(5) this mold is assembled with its matching half to form the cope
and drag, and with vacuum maintained on both halves, pouring is
accomplished.
(6) The plastic sheet quickly burns away on contacting the molten
metal. After solidification, nearly all of the sand
can be recovered for reuse.
Expanded Polystyrene Process
• It uses a mold of sand packed around a polystyrene foam pattern
that vaporizes when the molten metal is poured into the mold.
• Other names, include lost-foam process, lost pattern process,
evaporative-foam process, and full-mold process.
• The foam pattern includes the sprue, risers, and gating system,
and it may also contain internal cores.
• Since the foam pattern itself becomes the cavity in the mold,
considerations of draft and parting lines can be ignored.
• The pattern is normally coated with a refractory compound to
provide a smoother surface on the pattern and to improve its high
temperature resistance.
Steps in expanded polystyrene casting process
Steps in expanded polystyrene casting process
(1) Pattern of polystyrene is coated with refractory compound.
(2) Foam pattern is placed in mold box, and sand is compacted
around the pattern.
(3) molten metal is poured into the portion of the pattern that forms
the pouring cup and sprue.
As the metal enters the mold, the polystyrene foam is vaporized
ahead of the advancing liquid, thus allowing the resulting mold
cavity to be filled.
Investment Casting
• A pattern made of wax is coated with a refractory material to
make the mold, after which the wax is melted away prior to
pouring the molten metal.
• The term investment comes from one of the less familiar
definitions of the word invest, which is ‘‘to cover completely,’’
this referring to the coating of the refractory material around the
wax pattern.
• It is a precision casting process, because it is capable of making
castings of high accuracy and intricate detail.
• Also known as the lost-wax process, because the wax pattern is
lost from the mold prior to casting.
• Separate pattern must be made for every casting.
Steps in investment casting
Steps in investment casting
(1) wax patterns are produced.
(2) several patterns are attached to a sprue to form a pattern
tree.
(3) the pattern tree is coated with a thin layer of refractory material.
(4) the full mold is formed by covering the coated tree with
sufficient refractory material to make it rigid.
(5) the mold is held in an inverted position and heated to melt the
wax and permit it to drip out of the cavity.
(6) the mold is preheated to a high temperature, which ensures that
all contaminants are eliminated from the mold; it also permits the
liquid metal to flow more easily into the detailed cavity; the molten
metal is poured and it solidifies.
(7) the mold is broken away from the finished casting. Parts are
separated from the sprue.
Advantages of investment casting
(1) parts of great complexity and intricacy can be cast.
(2) close dimensional control—tolerances of 0.075 mm are
possible.
(3) good surface finish is possible
(4) the wax can usually be recovered for reuse
(5) additional machining is not normally required
Hot-chamber machines
• The metal is melted in a container attached to the machine,
and a piston is used to inject the liquid metal under high
pressure into the die.
• applications is limited to low melting point metals that do not
chemically attack the plunger and other mechanical components.
• The metals include zinc, tin, lead, and sometimes magnesium.
• High production rate
• Pressure ranges upto 35 MPa
Hot-chamber die casting
Steps in hot chamber die casting
1) with die closed and plunger withdrawn, molten metal flows into
the chamber.
2) plunger forces metal in chamber to flow into die, maintaining
pressure during cooling and solidification.
3) plunger is withdrawn, die is opened, and solidified part is
ejected.
Cold chamber die casting
• Molten metal is poured into an unheated chamber from an
external melting container.
• A piston is used to inject the metal under high pressure into the
die cavity.
• Injection pressures used in these machines are typically 14 to
140 MPa.
• Typically used for casting aluminium, brass, and magnesium
alloys.
Steps in cold-chamber casting
(1) with die closed and ram withdrawn, molten metal is poured into
the chamber.
(2) ram forces metal to flow into die, maintaining pressure during
cooling a solidification.
(3) ram is withdrawn, die is opened, and part is ejected. (Gating
system is simplified.)
Steps in cold-chamber casting
Materials used for Molds in Die casting
• Molds used in die casting operations are usually made of tool
steel, mold steel, Tungsten and molybdenum
• venting holes and passageways must be built into the dies at the
parting line to evacuate the air and gases in the cavity.
• formation of flash is common in die casting, in which the liquid
metal under high pressure squeezes into the small space between
the die halves at the parting line or into the clearances around the
cores and ejector pins.
Advantages of die casting include
(1) high production rates possible
(2) economical for large production quantities.
(3) close tolerances possible, on the order of 0.076 mm for small
parts
(4) good surface finish
(5) thin sections are possible, down to about 0.5mm.
(6) rapid cooling provides small grain size and good strength to
the casting
Centrifugal Casting
• Centrifugal casting refers to several casting methods in which the
mold is rotated at high speed so that centrifugal force
distributes the molten metal to the outer regions of the die cavity.
Mold shift
• It refers to a defect caused by a sidewise
displacement of the mold cope relative to
the drag, the result of which is a step in the
cast product at the parting line
Casting defects related to the use of sand molds
Core shift
• It is similar to mold shift, but it is the core
that is displaced, and the displacement is
usually vertical.
• Core shift and mold shift are caused by
buoyancy of the molten metal
Mold crack
• It occurs when mold strength is insufficient,
and a crack develops, into which liquid metal
can seep to form a ‘‘fin’’ on the final casting
Inspection Methods
Foundry inspection procedures include
(1) visual inspection to detect obvious defects such as misruns,
cold shuts, and severe surface flaws
(2) dimensional measurements to ensure that tolerances have
been meet
(3) metallurgical, chemical, physical, and other tests concerned
with the inherent quality of the cast metal
(a) pressure testing: to locate leaks in the casting
(b) radiographic methods, magnetic particle tests, the
use of fluorescent penetrants, and supersonic
testing: to detect either surface or internal defects in the
casting
(c) mechanical testing : to determine properties such as
tensile strength and hardness.