Metal Casting
Metal Casting
Metal Casting
A shaping process
Manufacturing Process:
▪ Sand Casting
▪ Other Expendable Mold Casting Processes
▪ Permanent Mold Casting Processes
▪ Foundry Practice
▪ Casting Quality
▪ Metals for Casting
▪ Product Design Considerations
Two Categories of Metal Casting
Processes
1. Expendable mould processes - mould is sacrificed to
remove part
– Advantage: more complex shapes possible
– Disadvantage: production rates often limited by
time to make mold rather than casting itself
2. Permanent mould processes - mould is made of
metal and can be used to make many castings
– Advantage: higher production rates
– Disadvantage: geometries limited by need to
open mould
Overview of Sand Casting
Draft: Slight taper given to a pattern to allow drawing from the sand.
Chaplet: A metal support used to hold a core in place in a mold. Not used
when a core print will serve.
Binders: Materials used to hold molding sand together.
Pouring: Filling the mold with molten metal.
▪ Shell Molding
▪ Centrifugal casting
▪ Investment Casting
▪ Plaster Mold and Ceramic Mold Casting
▪ Continuous casting
Shell Molding
Casting process in which the mold is a thin shell of sand held
together by thermosetting resin binder . Uses metal
pattern to make shell mould
▪ Developed in Germany during early 1940
▪ a match‑plate or cope‑and‑drag
metal pattern is heated (180-250)
▪ placed over a box containing sand
mixed with thermosetting resin
(Phenol formaldehyde)
Steps in shell‑molding:
(2) box is inverted so that sand and resin fall onto the hot
pattern, causing a layer of the mixture to partially cure on
the surface to form a hard shell
Steps in shell‑molding:
(3) box is repositioned so that loose uncured particles
drop away
Steps in shell‑moulding:
(4) sand shell is heated in oven for several minutes to complete
hardening
(5) shell mold is stripped from the pattern
Steps in shell‑molding:
(6) two halves of the shell mold are assembled, supported by sand or
metal shot in a box, and pouring is accomplished
(7) the finished casting with sprue removed
Advantages and Disadvantages
of Shell Molding
▪ Advantages:
▪ Advantages:
– Parts of great complexity and intricacy can be cast
– Close dimensional control and good surface finish
– Wax can usually be recovered for reuse
– Additional machining is not normally required ‑ this is a
net shape process
▪ Disadvantages
– Many processing steps are required
– Relatively expensive process
Permanent Mold Casting Processes
▪ Advantages:
– Good dimensional control and surface finish
– More rapid solidification caused by the cold metal mold
results in a finer grain structure, so stronger castings are
produced
▪ Limitations:
– Generally limited to metals of lower melting point
– Simple part geometries compared to sand casting
because of the need to open the mold
– High cost of mold
Applications of Permanent Mould Casting
▪ Advantages:
– Economical for large production quantities
– Good dimensional accuracy and surface finish
– Thin sections are possible
– Rapid cooling provides small grain size and good strength to
casting
▪ Disadvantages:
– Generally limited to metals with low melting points
– Part geometry must allow removal from die cavity
Centrifugal Casting
▪ Trimming
▪ Removing the core
▪ Surface cleaning
▪ Inspection
▪ Repair, if required
▪ Heat treatment
Trimming
▪ Most commercial castings are made of alloys rather than pure metals
– Alloys are generally easier to cast, and properties of product are better
▪ Sharp corners and angles should be avoided, since they are sources
of stress concentrations and may cause hot tearing and cracks
▪ Generous fillets should be designed on inside corners and sharp
edges should be blended
Product Design Considerations:
Draft Guidelines
Figure 11.25 – Design change to eliminate the need for using a core: (a) original design, and
(b) redesign
Product Design Considerations:
Dimensional Tolerances and Surface Finish
Significant differences in dimensional accuracies and finishes can be achieved in
castings, depending on process:
▪ Poor dimensional accuracies and finish for sand casting
▪ Good dimensional accuracies and finish for die casting and investment casting
Product Design Considerations:
Machining Allowances