1, Sand Casting
A casting method for producing castings in sand molds. Steel, iron, and most non-ferrous alloy castings can be obtained by sand casting method.
Technical features:
(1) Suitable for making blanks with complex shapes, especially those with complex inner cavities;
(2) Wide adaptability and low cost;
(3) For certain materials with poor plasticity, such as cast iron, sand casting is the only forming process for manufacturing their parts or blanks.
Application: Castings for automotive engine cylinder blocks, cylinder heads, crankshafts, etc.
2, Investment Casting
It usually refers to a casting scheme where a mold is made of a fusible material, and several layers of refractory material are coated on the surface of the mold to form a shell. The mold is then melted and discharged from the shell to obtain a mold without a parting surface. After high-temperature calcination, it can be filled with sand and poured. Often referred to as "wax loss casting".
Advantages:
(1) High dimensional and geometric accuracy;
(2) High surface roughness;
(3) Capable of casting castings with complex shapes and unrestricted casting alloys.
Disadvantages: Complex processes and high costs
Application: Suitable for producing small parts with complex shapes, high precision requirements, or difficulty in other processing, such as turbine engine blades.
3, Die Casting
Die casting is the process of using high pressure to rapidly press molten metal into the cavity of a precision metal mold, and the molten metal cools and solidifies under pressure to form a casting.
Advantages:
(1) During die casting, the metal liquid bears high pressure and has a fast flow rate;
(2) Good product quality, stable size, and good interchangeability;
(3) High production efficiency and frequent use of die-casting molds;
(4) Suitable for large-scale production with good economic benefits.
Disadvantages:
(1) Castings are prone to producing small pores and shrinkage porosity;
(2) Die castings have low plasticity and are not suitable for working under impact loads and vibrations;
(3) When high melting point alloys are die-casting, the mold life is low, which affects the expansion of die-casting production.
Application: Die castings were first used in the automotive and instrumentation industries, and later gradually expanded to various industries, such as agricultural machinery, machine tool industry, electronics industry, national defense industry, computer, medical equipment, clocks, cameras, and daily hardware.
4, Low Pressure Casting
Low pressure casting refers to the method of filling the mold with liquid metal under lower pressure (0.02-0.06 MPa) and crystallizing under pressure to form a casting.
Technical features:
(1) The pressure and speed during pouring can be adjusted, making it suitable for various different casting molds (such as metal molds, sand molds, etc.), casting various alloys and castings of various sizes;
(2) Adopting bottom injection molding, the metal liquid filling is smooth and free of splashing, which can avoid gas entrapment and erosion of the mold wall and core, and improve the qualification rate of castings;
(3) Castings crystallize under pressure, with a dense microstructure, clear contours, smooth surface, and high mechanical properties, making them particularly advantageous for casting large and thin-walled parts;
(4) Eliminating the need for shrinkage risers, the metal utilization rate is increased to 90% to 98%;
(5) Low labor intensity, good working conditions, simple equipment, and easy implementation of mechanization and automation.
Application: Mainly based on traditional products (cylinder head, wheel hub, cylinder frame, etc.).
5, Centrifugal Casting
Centrifugal casting is a casting method that pours molten metal into a rotating mold, fills the mold under centrifugal force, and solidifies into shape.
Advantages:
(1) There is almost no metal consumption in the pouring system and riser system, improving the process yield;
(2) When producing hollow castings, the core is not needed, so the metal filling capacity can be greatly improved when producing long tubular castings;
(3)Castings have high density, fewer defects such as pores and slag inclusions, and high mechanical properties;
(4) Easy to manufacture composite metal castings for cylinders and sleeves.
Disadvantages:
(1) There are certain limitations when using it to produce special-shaped castings;
(2) The diameter of the inner hole in the casting is inaccurate, the surface of the inner hole is relatively rough, the quality is poor, and there is a large machining allowance;
(3) Castings are prone to specific gravity segregation.
Application: Centrifugal casting was first used in the production of cast pipes, and it is widely used in industries such as metallurgy, mining, transportation, drainage and irrigation machinery, aviation, national defense, and automobiles both domestically and internationally to produce steel, iron, and non-ferrous carbon alloy castings. The production of castings such as centrifugal cast iron pipes, internal combustion engine cylinder liners, and shaft sleeves is particularly common.
6, Gravity Die Casting
Gravity die casting refers to a molding method in which liquid metal fills metal molds under the action of gravity and cools and solidifies in the mold to obtain castings.
Advantages:
(1) The thermal conductivity and heat capacity of metal molds are high, the cooling speed is fast, the casting structure is dense, and the mechanical properties are about 15% higher than sand mold castings.
(2) Castings that can achieve high dimensional accuracy and low surface roughness values, and have good quality stability.
(3) By not using or rarely using sand cores, the environment is improved, dust and harmful gases are reduced, and labor intensity is reduced.
Disadvantages:
(1) The metal mold itself has no breathability, and certain measures must be taken to export the air in the mold cavity and the gas generated by the sand core;
(2) Metal molds have no yielding properties and are prone to cracking during casting solidification;
(3) The manufacturing cycle of metal molds is long and the cost is high. Therefore, only in mass production can good economic results be demonstrated.
Application: Metal mold casting is suitable for mass production of complex shaped non-ferrous alloy castings such as aluminum alloys and magnesium alloys, as well as for the production of steel metal castings, ingots, etc.
7, Vacuum Die Casting
Vacuum die casting is an advanced die casting process that eliminates or significantly reduces porosity and dissolved gas in the die casting mold cavity during the die casting process, thereby improving the mechanical properties and surface quality of the die casting.
Advantages:
(1) Eliminate or reduce internal porosity in die castings, improve mechanical properties and surface quality of die castings, and improve coating performance;
(2) Reducing the back pressure of the mold cavity can use alloys with lower specific pressure and poorer casting performance, and it is possible to use small machines to cast larger castings;
(3) Improved filling conditions, capable of die-casting thinner castings.
Disadvantages:
(1) The sealing structure of the mold is complex, making it difficult to manufacture and install, resulting in higher costs;
(2) If the vacuum die-casting method is not controlled properly, the effect will not be very significant.
Application: Vacuum die casting technology has developed rapidly and has been widely used in industries such as aerospace, weapons, ships, instruments, valve bodies, household appliances, and automobiles.
8, Squeezing Die Casting
Squeezing die casting is a method of solidification and flow forming of liquid or semi-solid metals under high pressure, directly obtaining workpieces or blanks. It has the advantages of high utilization rate of liquid metal, simplified process, and stable quality, making it an energy-saving and potential metal forming technology.
Direct squeeze casting: spray coating, pour alloy, mold closing, pressurization, pressure holding, pressure relief, mold separation, blank demolding, and resetting;
Indirect squeeze casting: coating spraying, mold closing, feeding, mold filling, pressurization, pressure holding, pressure relief, mold separation, blank demolding, and resetting.
Technical features:
(1) Can eliminate internal defects such as porosity, shrinkage, and porosity;
(2) Low surface roughness and high dimensional accuracy;
(3) Can prevent the occurrence of casting cracks;
(4) Easy to achieve mechanization and automation.
Application: It can be used to produce various types of alloys, such as aluminum alloys, zinc alloys, copper alloys, ductile iron, etc.
9, Lost Foam Casting
Lost foam casting (also known as full mold casting) is a new casting method that combines paraffin or foam models similar to the size and shape of the castings into model clusters, brushes and dries refractory coatings, buries them in dry quartz sand for vibration molding, pours them under negative pressure, vaporizes the models, occupies the mold position with liquid metal, and forms castings after solidification and cooling.
Process flow: pre foaming → foaming forming → coating immersion → drying → shaping → pouring → sand drop → cleaning
Technical features:
(1) High casting accuracy, no sand core, reduces processing time;
(2) No parting surface, flexible design, high degree of freedom;
(3) Clean production, pollution-free;
(4) Reduce investment and production costs.
Application: Suitable for producing various sizes of precision castings with complex structures, with unlimited alloy types and production batches. Such as gray cast iron engine casing, high manganese steel bend pipes, etc.
10, Continual Casting
Continual casting is an advanced casting method that continuously pours molten metal into a special metal mold called a crystallizer. The solidified (crust) casting is continuously pulled out from the other end of the crystallizer, and it can obtain castings of any length or specific length.
Technical features:
(1) Due to the rapid cooling of the metal, the crystal is dense, the structure is uniform, and the mechanical properties are good;
(2) Save metals and improve yield;
(3) Simplified the process, eliminating the need for styling and other procedures, thus reducing labor intensity; The required production area has also been significantly reduced;
(4) Continuous casting production is easy to achieve mechanization and automation, improving production efficiency.
Application: Continuous casting can be used to cast long castings with unchanged cross-sectional shapes, such as ingots, slabs, bars, pipes, etc., such as steel, iron, copper alloys, aluminum alloys, magnesium alloys, etc.
