Sand Casting Process
Sand Casting Process
• Cores are pre-determined shaped mass of dry sand, which are placed into the
mould before pouring the molten metal to create the interior contours of the
casting.
• They are typically made of a sand mixture - sand combined with water and
organic adhesives called binders- which is baked to form the core.
• This allows the cores to be strong yet collapsible, so they can be easily removed
from the finished casting.
• Since cores are made in moulds, they require a pattern and mould, called a core
box.
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• Rough cleaning is the removal of the gating systems from the casting.
• Initial finishing removes any residual mould or core sand that remains on the
piece after it is free of the mould.
• Trimming removes any unnecessary metal.
• In the last stages of finishing, the surface of the casting is cleaned for improved
appearance.
CASTING TERMINOLOGY
• The casting starts with the construction of a pattern, a duplicate of the final
casting with allowances.
• The moulding material is then packed around the pattern, and the pattern is
removed to produce a mould cavity.
• The term casting is used to describe both the process and the product when
molten metal is poured and solidified in a mould.
Flask
• The flask is the box that contains the moulding aggregate.
Cope
• In a two-part mould, the cope is the top half of the pattern, flask, mould or core.
Drag
• The drag is the bottom half of any of the pattern, flask, mould or core.
• A core is a sand shape that is inserted into the mould to produce internal features
on a casting, such as holes or passages for water cooling.
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Core Print
• A core print is the region added to the pattern, core, or mould that is used to
locate and support the core within the mould.
• The mould material and the core then combine to form the mould cavity, the void
into which the molten metal will be poured and solidified to produce the desired
casting.
Parting Line
• The parting line or parting surface is the interface that separates the cope and
drag halves of the mould, flask, or pattern, and the halves of a core during some
core-making processes.
Draft
• The draft is the taper on a pattern or casting that permits it to be withdrawn from
the mould.
• The mould or die used to produce casting cores is known as a core box.
Pouring cup
• The molten metal is not directly poured into the mould cavity because it may
cause mould erosion.
• Molten metal is poured into a pouring basin, which acts as a reservoir from which
it moves smoothly into the sprue.
Sprue
• Sprue helps in feeding metal to the runner, which in turn reaches the cavity
through the gates.
• The sprue may have either straight or taper shape.
• In straight or parallel sprue, the metal contracts inwards and is pulled away from
the sprue walls.
• In a tapered sprue, the liquid metal flows down firmly in contact with walls and
this reduces turbulence and eliminates sucking of gas or air from the mould (Air
Aspiration).
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Sprue base
• This is a reservoir for metal at the bottom of the sprue to reduce the momentum
of the falling molten metal.
• The molten metal, as it moves down the sprue gains in velocity, some of which is
lost in the sprue base well, and the mould erosion is reduced.
• This molten metal changes direction in the sprue base and flows into the runner
in a more uniform way.
Riser
• The riser is designed to serve as a reservoir of metal which stays liquid longer
than the casting and "feeds" liquid to fill any shrinkage cavities which tend to
develop in the casting.
• If the metal does not appear in the riser, it signifies that either the metal is
insufficient to fill the mould cavity or there is some abstraction to the metal flow
between the sprue and riser.
Runner
• Runner is used to take the molten metal from the sprue base and distribute it to
several gate passageways around the cavity.
Gate
• The gate is a channel, which connects runner with the mould cavity and through
which molten metal flows to fill the mould cavity.
• In top gating, the molten material falls directly into the mould cavity through a
height.
• In bottom gating, the molten material enters the mould cavity from the bottom
and hence there is no problem of scouring and splashing.
• But, in case of bottom gating system since molten material enters from bottom, if
freezing of molten metal takes place then it could choke off metal flow before
mould is full.
• Bottom gating creates an unfavourable temperature gradient and makes it
difficult to achieve directional solidification. Bottom gating is used for heavy
castings.
• In parting gate the molten material enters the mould at the parting plane.
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GATING SYSTEM
• Gating systems are necessary for the molten metal to flow into the mould cavity.
• The gating system is the network of channels used to deliver the molten metal
from outside the mould into the mould cavity.
• The way in which the liquid metal enters the mould has a decided influence upon
the quality and soundness of the casting, the different components of a gating
system should be carefully designed and produced.
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