Friday 9 October 2009

Sand Casting

A sand casting or a sand molded casting is a cast part produced by forming a mold from a sand mixture and pouring molten liquid metal into the cavity in the mold. The mold is then cooled until the metal has solidified. In the last stage the casting is separated from the mold. There are six steps in this process:



1.Place a pattern in sand to create a mold.

2.Incorporate a gating system.

3.Remove the pattern.

4.Fill the mold cavity with molten metal.

5.Allow the metal to cool.

6.Break away the sand mold and remove the casting.





There are two main types of sand used for molding. "Green sand" is a mixture of silica sand, clay, moisture and other additives. The "air set" method uses dry sand bonded to materials other than clay, using a fast curing adhesive. The latter may also be referred to as No bake mold casting. When these are used, they are collectively called "air set" sand castings to distinguish these from "green sand" castings. Two types of molding sand are natural bonded (bank sand) and synthetic (lake sand), which is generally preferred due to its more consistent composition.

No comments:

Post a Comment