Showing posts with label Core. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Core. Show all posts

Thursday 24 October 2013

CORE AND CORE BOX



CORE AND CORE BOX

A core is a preformed baked sand or green sand aggregate inserted in a mold to shape
the interior part of a casting which cannot be shaped by the pattern.

A core box is a wood or metal structure, the cavity of which has the shape of the desired core which is made therein.A core box, like a pattern ismade by the pattern maker.Cores run from extremely simple to extremely complicated.

A core could be a simple round cylinder form needed to core a hole through a hub of a wheel or it could be a very complicatedcore used to core out the water coolingchannels in a cast iron engine block along with the inside of the cylinders.

Dry sand cores are for the most part made ofsharp, clay-free, dry silica sand mixed with a binder and baked until cured;the binder cements the sand together.

When the metal is poured the core holds together long enough for the metal to solidify, then the binder is finely cooked, from the heat of the casting, until its bonding power is lost or burned out.
If the core mix is correct for the job, it can be readily removed from the castings interior bysimply pouring it out as burnt core sand.

This characteristic of a core mix is called its   collapsibility.

The size and pouring temperature of acasting determines how well and how long the core will stay together.

Dry sand core with support wire.

The gases generated within the core during pouring must be vented to the outside of the mold preventing gas porosity and a defect known as a core blow.

Also, a core must have sufficient hot strength to be handled and used properly.

The hot strength refers to its strength while being heated by the casting operation.

Because of the shape and size of some coresthey must be further strengthened withrods and wires.

A long span core for a length of cast iron pipe would require rodding to prevent the core from sagging or bending upward when the mold is poured because of the liquid metal exerting a strong pressure during pouring.




 
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Wednesday 23 October 2013

Pattern Types

The Pattern

A full-sized model of the part, slightly enlarged to
account for shrinkage and machining allowances in
the casting

Pattern materials:

Wood - common material because it is easy to work, but it warps
Metal - more expensive to make, but lasts much longer
Plastic - compromise between wood and metal




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Sand Casting Process



Steps in Sand Casting

1.Pour molten metal into sand mold
2. Allow metal to solidify
3. Break up the mold to remove casting
4. Clean and inspect casting
5. Heat treatment of casting is sometimes required to improve metallurgical properties
 

Making the Sand Mold
 
1.The cavity in the sand mold is formed by packing sand around a pattern, then     
  separating the mold into two halves and removing the pattern
2.The mold must also contain gating and riser system
3.If casting is to have internal surfaces, a core must be included in mold
4.A new sand mold must be made for each part






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Casting Patterns QUIZ






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SAND CASTING QUIZ

Sand Casting



•Most widely used casting process, accounting for a significant majority of total tonnage cast
•Nearly all alloys can be sand casted, including metals with high melting temperatures,
  such as steel, nickel,and titanium
•Parts ranging in size from small to very large
•Production quantities from one to millions






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