Investment Castings

Investment castings and investment casting manufactures including steel castings, lost wax castings, precision casting, non-ferrous castings, and investment casting process.

Categories Related to: Investment Castings


Alloy – A compound consisting of either more than one metal or a metal and a nonmetal blended together.
 
“As Cast” Condition – Casting that is not heat treated after being removed from the mold.
 
Burnout – The process whereby excess water and wax is removed from a molding.
 
Casting – Forming and shaping a material substance, such as an industrial piece of equipment, by pouring liquid into a mold and allowing it to harden.
 
Cavity – The empty space within the mold into which the molten metal will be poured.
 
Centrifugal Casting – The process of filling a permanent mold cavity with molten material while rotating the mold. Centrifugal casting is often used during the investment casting process to increase the amount of pressure exerted upon the metal in order to reproduce mold details, such as lettering and holes.
 
Ceramic Mold Process – The process by which an investment mold is created from a pattern in order to be cast. Ceramic molds consist of solid molds and ceramic shells.
 
Ceramic Shell Process – The method of creating a ceramic mold through the immersion of a pattern into a slurry of liquid and covering the coated pattern with sand. The pattern is usually immersed and coated nine to ten times before the shell is completed.
 
Cocoon Process – The method of applying protective plastic to metal.
 
Cold Shut – Lines on the surface of a casting that are the by-product of the incomplete fusion of metal streams.
 
Concentricity – The sharing of a common point or axis of two or more surfaces of shapes, such as cylinders, cones, spheres and hexagons.
 
Core – A form inserted into a mold to create internal mold features.
 
Dirty Casting – A surplus of nonmetal substances within a casting.
 
Ferrous – Pertaining to or containing iron.
 
Forging – The method of reshaping metal through the application of heat and compression.
 
Gates – The openings in the gating system that transfer the molten metal from the runners into the mold cavity.
 
Gating System – The structure that transfers the molten metal into the mold. Gating systems are designed to uniformly transfer the metal into the mold cavity to create an even mold.
 
Inclusions – Small pieces of refractory materials, sand, slag or deoxidation products that have been trapped within the casting while it was solidifying.
 
Injection Molding – The injection of a molten substance, usually metal, under substantial pressure into a mold.
 
Lost Wax Process – An ancient process related to investment casting that consisted of creating and plastering a wax model, replacing the wax with molten metal and removing the plaster after the metal cooled.
 
Misrun – An incomplete casting.
 
Mold – A hollow container from which liquid substances can be formed into solid shapes.
 
Molten – A solid that has been converted into a liquid through the application of heat.
 
Non-ferrous – Not pertaining to or containing iron. Examples of non-ferrous metals include aluminum- and copper-based substances.
 
Pattern – A casting model created by injecting metal dye with wax. When the wax solidifies, it forms the pattern, which is then molded and cast.
 
Pattern Oversize Factor – A term that refers to the extent to which the pattern size must be increased to allow for metal shrinkage.
 
Plaster Mold Casting – The process in which a wax pattern is sprayed with plaster slurry to create a mold.
 
Permanent Mold Casting – The process of using metal, often iron, to create the mold. Permanent molds are cheaper than sand molds when a large quantity of parts is produced, as they can be used more than once.
 
Pouring Cup – The part of the gating system that pushes the molten metal into a mold.
 
Riser – An open space in a mold into which extra molten metal is trapped.
 
Runners – Horizontal mechanisms connected to the sprue that transfer the molten metal from the sprue to the mold.
 
Sand Casting – The process of pouring molten metal into a natural or an artificial sand mold to form large parts, often made of iron.
 
Shell Casting – The process in which sand and plastic are poured over a hot metal pattern, whose heat causes the sand and plastic to mold to the pattern. The mold is removed from the metal, filled with molten metal and broken once the metal hardens, forming a cast.
 
Shrinkage – The contraction of metal during the cooling process.

Shrinkage Allowance – The degree to which a pattern is enlarged to allow for the contraction of the metal during the cooling process.
 
Slurry – The thick, insoluble liquid made of substances like plaster and silica from which a mold is created by repeatedly covering the patterned wax with the liquid.
 
Solid Mold Process – The method in which a wax pattern is placed within a steel container called a flask. The flask is then filled with a liquid plaster, which hardens into a mold of the pattern.
 
Sprue – Vertical mechanism connected to the pouring cup that transfers the molten metal to the runners.
 
Straightness – A term that refers to the deviation of the cast axis from the true axis.
 
Vents – Small holes in the gating system through which air is pushed out of the mold as molten metal is poured into the mold.