Die Casting: The Process And The Techniques, Part 2
Die Casting: The Process And The Techniques, Part 2
There are several secondary steps which may need to be taken once the
casting is removed, such as removing excess metal and smoothing rough
surfaces. However, die casting can create pieces of metal as thin as
1mm wide in these four simple steps, which makes it a more economic
process than using stamping presses or machine tools that require the
operation of multiple pieces of large machinery for metalwork.
The Life of a Die
A die casting die is built to do several things, each of equal
importance, and quite often the die itself cannot produce a completed
final product. While a die holds the liquid metal inside itself to
create a cast, there also must be a place for the metal to enter the
die and reach the inside. This means that when the metal cools, there
will be small pieces of unwanted metal attached to the final cast
called flash, which will need to be removed by hand or secondary
machine.
Hydraulic presses can be used to remove the flash or scrap, while an
older technique is to just saw off the flash by hand. A casting may
need to be sanded or ground down to remove mold lines, and if any extra
holes for screws or undercutting is necessary, this must be done
outside of the die as well.
Die casting machines can apply a clamping force that ranges from 100 to
4,000 psi, and are typically divided into categories according to the
type of metals they can cast. Hot chamber dies can cast metals with
lower melting points, such as zinc, while cold chamber dies cast metals
with higher melting points like aluminum.
Die casting dies typically have a lengthy lifespan, however over the
course of several hundred thousand heatings and coolings, the dies'
properties may begin to shift and weaken. Dies which make castings from
aluminum and its alloys tend to have a shorter lifespan, simply due to
the temperature required to make aluminum casts, while cold chamber
dies tend to last almost indefinitely. Die sets for casting brass
objects are extremely short-lived, and need to be replaced frequently,
regardless of the strength of the cast.