Dictionary Definition
casting
Noun
1 object formed by a mold [syn: cast]
2 the act of creating something by casting it in
a mold [syn: molding]
3 the act of throwing a fishing line out over the
water by means of a rod and reel [syn: cast]
4 the choice of actors to play particular roles
in a play or movie
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
-
- Rhymes: -ɑːstɪŋ
Verb form
casting- present participle of cast
Noun
- a manufacturing process using a mold
- The regurgitation of fur, feathers, and other undigestible material by hawks, to clean and empty their crops.
- the act of selecting actors, singers, dancers, models, etc.
Derived terms
Extensive Definition
Casting is a manufacturing process by which a
liquid material is (usually) poured into a mold, which contains a
hollow cavity of the desired shape, and then allowed to solidify.
The solid casting is then ejected or broken out to complete the
process. Casting may be used to form hot liquid metals or various
materials that cold set after mixing of components (such as
epoxies, concrete, plaster and clay). Casting is most often used
for making complex shapes that would be otherwise difficult or
uneconomical to make by other methods.
Casting is a 6000 year old process. The oldest
surviving casting is a copper frog from 3200 BC.
Sand casting requires
a lead time of days for production at high output rates (1-20
pieces/hr-mold) and is unsurpassed for large-part production. Green
(moist) sand has almost no part weight limit, whereas dry sand has
a practical part mass limit of 2300-2700 kg. Minimum part weight
ranges from 0.075-0.1 kg. The sand is bonded together using clays
(as in green sand) or chemical binders, or polymerized oils (such
as motor oil). Sand can be recycled many times in most operations
and requires little additional input.
Plaster casting (of metals)
Plaster casting is similar to sand molding except that plaster is substituted for sand. Plaster compound is actually composed of 70-80% gypsum and 20-30% strengthener and water. Generally, the form takes less than a week to prepare, after which a production rate of 1-10 units/hr-mold is achieved, with items as massive as 45 kg and as small as 30 g with very high surface resolution and fine tolerances. Parts that are typically made by plaster casting are lock components, gears, valves, fittings, tooling, and ornaments. Plaster casting is an inexpensive alternative to other molding processes due to the low cost of the plaster and the mold production. It may be disadvantageous, however, because the mold quality is dependent on several factors, "including consistency of the plaster molding composition, mold pouring procedures, and plaster curing techniques." If these factors are not closely monitored, the mold can result in distorted dimensions, shrinking upon drying and poor mold surfaces.Once used and cracked away, normal plaster cannot
easily be recast. Plaster casting is normally used for non-ferrous
metals such as aluminium-, zinc-, or copper-based alloys. It cannot be
used to cast ferrous material because sulfur in gypsum slowly reacts
with iron. The plaster itself cannot stand temperatures above
1200oC, which also limits the materials to be cast in plaster.
Prior to mold preparation the pattern is sprayed with a thin film
of parting compound to prevent the mold from sticking to the
pattern. The unit is shaken, so plaster fills the small cavities
around the pattern. The plaster sets, usually in about 15 minutes,
and the pattern is removed. The plaster is dried at temperatures
between 120o and 260oC. The mold is preheated and the molten metal
poured in.
The process is suitable for repeatable production
of net shape components, from a variety of different metals and
high performance alloys. Although generally used for small
castings, this process has been used to produce complete aircraft
door frames, with steel
castings of up to 300 kg and aluminium castings of up to 30
kg. Compared to other casting processes such as die casting
or sand
casting, it can be an expensive process, however the components
that can be produced using investment casting can incorporate
intricate contours, and in most cases the components are cast
near
net shape, so requiring little or no rework once cast.
Non-expendable mold casting
Non-expendable mold casting differs from
expendable processes in that the mold need not be reformed after
each production cycle. This technique includes at least four
different methods: permanent, die, centrifugal, and continuous
casting.
Permanent mold casting
Permanent mold casting (typically for non-ferrous
metals) requires a set-up time on the order of weeks to prepare a
steel tool, after which production rates of 5-50 pieces/hr-mold are
achieved with an upper mass limit of 9 kg per iron alloy item (cf.,
up to 135 kg for many nonferrous metal parts) and a lower limit of
about 0.1 kg. Steel cavities are coated with a refractory wash of
acetylene soot before processing to allow
easy removal of the workpiece and promote longer tool life.
Permanent molds have a limited life before wearing out. Worn molds
require either refinishing or replacement. Cast parts from a
permanent mold generally show 20% increase in tensile strength and
30% increase in elongation as compared to the products of sand
casting.
The only necessary input is the coating applied
regularly. Typically, permanent mold casting is used in forming
iron, aluminum, magnesium, and copper based alloys. The process is
highly automated.
Die casting
Die casting is the process of forcing molten
metal under high pressure
into mold cavities (which are machined into dies). Most die
castings are made from nonferrous
metals, specifically zinc, copper, and aluminum based alloys, but
ferrous
metal die castings are possible. The die casting method is
especially suited for applications where many small to medium sized
parts are needed with good detail, a fine surface quality and
dimensional consistency.
Centrifugal casting
Centrifugal casting is both gravity- and pressure-independent since it creates its own force feed using a temporary sand mold held in a spinning chamber at up to 900 N (90 g). Lead time varies with the application. Semi- and true-centrifugal processing permit 30-50 pieces/hr-mold to be produced, with a practical limit for batch processing of approximately 9000 kg total mass with a typical per-item limit of 2.3-4.5 kg.Industrially, the centrifugal casting of railway
wheels was an early application of the method developed by German industrial
company Krupp
and this capability enabled the rapid growth of the
enterprise.
Small art pieces such as jewelry are often cast
by this method using the lost wax process, as the forces enable the
rather viscous liquid metals to flow through very small passages
and into fine details such as leaves and petals. This effect is
similar to the benefits from vacuum
casting, also applied to jewelry casting.
Continuous casting
Continuous casting is a refinement of the casting
process for the continuous, high-volume production of metal
sections with a constant cross-section. Molten metal is poured into
an open-ended, water-cooled copper mold, which allows a 'skin' of
solid metal to form over the still-liquid centre. The strand, as it
is now called, is withdrawn from the mold and passed into a chamber
of rollers and water sprays; the rollers support the thin skin of
the strand while the sprays remove heat from the strand, gradually
solidifying the strand from the outside in. After solidification,
predetermined lengths of the strand are cut off by either
mechanical shears or travelling oxyacetylene torches and
transferred to further forming processes, or to a stockpile. Cast
sizes can range from strip (a few millimetres thick by about five
metres wide) to billets (90 to 160 mm square) to slabs (1.25 m wide
by 230 mm thick). Sometimes, the strand may undergo an initial
hot
rolling process before being cut.
Continuous casting is used due to the lower costs
associated with continuous production of a standard product, and
also increases the quality of the final product. Metals such as
steel, copper and aluminium are continuously
cast, with steel being the metal with the greatest tonnages cast
using this method.
Cooling rate
The rate at which a casting cools affects its microstructure, quality, and properties.The cooling rate is largely controlled by the
molding media used for making the mold. When the molten metal is
poured into the mold, the cooling down begins. This happens because
the heat within the molten metal flows into the relatively cooler
parts of the mold. Molding materials transfer heat from the casting
into the mold at different rates. For example, some molds made of
plaster may transfer heat very slowly, while a mold made entirely
of steel would transfer the heat very fast. This cooling down ends
with (solidification) where the
liquid metal turns to solid metal.
At its basic level a foundry may pour a casting
without regard to controlling how the casting cools down and the
metal freezes within the mold. However, if proper planning is not
done the result can be gas porosities and shrink porosities within
the casting. To improve the quality of a casting and engineer how
it is made, the foundry engineer studies the geometry of the part
and plans how the heat removal should be controlled.
Where heat should be removed quickly, the
engineer will plan the mold to include special heat sinks to the
mold, called chills. Fins may also be designed on a casting to
extract heat, which are later removed in the cleaning (also called
fettling) procees. Both methods may be used at local spots in a
mold where the heat will be extracted quickly.
Where heat should be removed slowly, a riser or
some padding may be added to a casting. A riser is an additional
larger cast piece which will cool more slowly than the place where
is it attached to the casting.
Generally speaking, an area of the casting which
is cooled quickly will have a fine grain structure and an area
which cools slowly will have a coarse grain structure.
Shrinkage
Castings shrink when they cool. Like nearly all materials, metals are less dense as a liquid than a solid. During solidification (freezing), the metal density dramatically increases. This results in a volume decrease for the metal in a mold. Solidification shrinkage is the term used for this contraction. Cooling from the freezing temperature to room temperature also involves a contraction. The easiest way to explain this contraction is that is the reverse of thermal expansion. Compensation for this natural phenomenon must be considered in two ways.Solidification shrinkage
The shrinkage caused by solidification can leave
cavities in a casting, weakening it. Risers
provide additional material to the casting as it solidifies. The
riser (sometimes called a "feeder") is designed to solidify later
than the part of the casting to which it is attached. Thus the
liquid metal in the riser will flow into the solidifying casting
and feed it until the casting is completely solid. In the riser
itself there will be a cavity showing where the metal was fed.
Risers add cost because some of their material must be removed, by
cutting away from the casting which will be shipped to the
customer. They are often necessary to produce parts which are free
of internal shrinkage voids. One method that assists in keeping the
metal molten in the riser longer is the utilisation of an
exothermic sleeve. http://www.gw-svr-a.org.uk/4566_castings.html
Sometimes, to promote directional
solidification, chills must be used in the mold. A chill is any material which will
conduct heat away from the casting more rapidly that the material
used for molding. Thus if silica sand is used for molding, a chill
may be made of copper, iron, aluminum, graphite, zircon sand,
chromite or any other material with the ability to remove heat
faster locally from the casting. All castings solidify with
progressive solidification but in some designs a chill is used
to control the rate and sequence of solidification of the
casting.
Patternmaker's shrink (thermal contraction)
Shrinkage after solidification can be dealt with
by using an oversized pattern designed for the relevant alloy.
Pattern makers use special "contraction rulers" (also called
"shrink rules") to make the patterns used by the foundry to make
castings to the design size required. These rulers are 1 - 6%
oversize, depending on the material to be cast. These rulers are
mainly referred to by their actual changes to the size. For example
a 1/100 ruler would add 1 mm to 100 mm if measured by a "standard
ruler" (hence being called a 1/100 contraction ruler). Using such a
ruler during pattern making will ensure an oversize pattern. Thus,
the mold is larger also, and when the molten metal solidifies it
will shrink and the casting will be the size required by the
design, if measured by a standard ruler. A pattern made to match an
existing part would be made as follows: First, the existing part
would be measured using a standard ruler, then when constructing
the pattern, the pattern maker would use a contraction ruler,
ensuring that the casting would contract to the correct size.
See also
References
External links
casting in German: Gießen (Verfahren)
casting in Spanish: Fundición
casting in Esperanto: Gisado
casting in Persian: ریختهگری
casting in French: Moulage
casting in Indonesian: Pengecoran
casting in Italian: Fusione (industria)
casting in Hungarian: Öntészet
casting in Dutch: Gieten (metaalkunde)
casting in Japanese: 鋳造
casting in Norwegian: Støping
casting in Polish: Odlewnictwo
casting in Portuguese: Fundição
casting in Russian: Литьё
casting in Slovenian: Litje
casting in Finnish: Valaminen
casting in Swedish: Gjutning
casting in Vietnamese: Công nghệ đúc
casting in Ukrainian: Ливарне виробництво
casting in Chinese: 鑄造
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
CYSP sculpture, adding, anaglyptics, anaglyptography,
angling, archery, architectural
sculpture, architecture, assembly, bone-carving,
building, bullion, button, calculation, calculus, cast, ceroplastics, chasing, chucking, ciphering, clay sculpture,
composition,
computation,
construction,
conversion, crafting, craftsmanship, creation, cultivation, decorative
sculpture, devising,
earth art, elaboration, embossing, engraving, erection, estimation, extraction, fabrication, fashioning, firing, fishery, fishing, flinging, fly fishing, footing, formation, forming, formulation, founding, framing, garden sculpture,
gate, gem-cutting, glass
sculpture, glyptic,
growing, guddling, gunnery, handicraft, handiwork, harpooning, harvesting, heaving, hurling, ingot, ivory-carving, jaculation, jigging, lobbing, lost-wax process,
machining, making, manufacture, manufacturing, metal
sculpture, milling,
mining, modeling, mold, molding, monumental sculpture,
musketry, paper
sculpture, pig, piscation, pitching, plaster casting,
plastic art, portrait sculpture, prefabrication, preparation, processing, producing, projection, raising, reckoning, refining, regulus, relief, relief-carving, relievo, rod and reel, sculptor, sculpture, sculpturing, seal, shaping, sheet metal,
shell-carving, shooting, skeet, skeet shooting, slinging, smelting, sow, stamp, statuary, still-fishing, stone
sculpture, stonecutting, throwing, totaling, toting, trajection, trapshooting, trawling, trolling, whaling, whittling, wire sculpture,
wood carving, workmanship, xyloglyphy