Die Casting Blog for Cast-Parts Aluminum Die Cast Parts and Zinc Die Cast Parts manufacturing and cast parts production

April 10, 2009

Different Aluminum Casting Processes

Filed under: Aluminum Casting Parts — Tags: — admin @ 3:12 am

Different Aluminum Castings Processes. Majority of the aluminum casting processes made in the United States are for automotive industry. Aluminum cast parts are also frequently used in power transmission, architectural structural and ornamental purposes. Aluminum cast parts are commonly utilized in vehicles such as aircraft, trucks, automobiles, railroad cars and others.

Aluminum casting process involves the melting of the aluminum or aluminum alloys and pouring it into a mold of preferred shape and allowed to harden. The solidified casting is then ejected out to complete the process. Casting is preferable in the production of complex shapes and more refined surface. It is oftentimes used in shaping materials such glass, plastics, metals and alloys.

In casting aluminum processes, feasibility and cost factors, and quality factors have significant effect in the selection of which casting method should be used. There are various methods involve in the aluminum casting processes, and these are grouped into two categories: expendable mold casting and non-expendable mold casting. The expendable mold casting involves the use of temporary, non-reusable molds and these include the waste molding of plaster, sand casting, plaster casting of metals, casting of plaster, concrete, or plastic resin, shell molding, investment casting, and bonded sand processes. expendable mold casting on the other hand, as differentiated from those methods under the expendable mold castings, need not be reformed after each production cycle; and these include the permanent mold casting, die casting, semi-solid metal casting, centrifugal casting, and continuous casting. Some other methods of casting are lost foam, squeeze casting, and hot isostatic pressing.

Cast Parts Die Casting Company
6918 Beck Avenue
North Hollywood, CA. 91605
818-982-9386 Phone * Sales@Cast-Parts.com.

March 29, 2009

Aluminum Casting Parts

Filed under: Aluminum Casting Parts — Tags: — admin @ 12:22 am

Aluminum Casting Parts. Die casting is commonly used in the production of engineering metal parts. Die casting involves the process of forcing molten metal under pressure to create reusable steel mold or die. Die casting process can be used in both ferrous and non-ferrous metals, but are more commonly used in non-ferrous metals such as aluminum, copper, lead, magnesium, tin based alloys and zinc. As compared to sand molding, die casting is produced quicker and more economically in automatic machines, and multiple production of similar parts can be cast in just one operation by using multiple dies. Die casting is preferable in the production of tools which require more refined and more detailed process.

Aluminum die casting is a process which involves the placing of melted aluminum metal under pressure and forcing it into a steel mold or die. Aluminum die casts are lightweight alloy which has one-third of the steel’s density, and stiffness. Its light weight makes it useful in the manufacture of tools which place importance to mobility and energy conservation. Aluminum cast parts are commonly used in the construction of aircraft, railroad cars and automobiles. Due to its great resistance to corrosion and high-heat conductivity, Aluminum cast parts are frequently used as well in the manufacture of hardware and tools. Aluminum cast parts are characterized by high thermal, electrical conductivity and strength at high temperatures. These characteristics of Aluminum cast parts made it widely used in the manufacture of cooking utensils and pistons of internal-combustion engines. Aluminum wire is thicker yet lighter than a copper wire, this makes it preferable in long-distance, high-voltage power transmission.

Cast Parts Die Casting Company
6918 Beck Avenue
North Hollywood, CA. 91605
818-982-9386 Phone * Sales@Cast-Parts.com.

March 13, 2009

Die Casting for Aluminum Casting Parts

Filed under: Aluminum Casting Parts — Tags: — admin @ 1:54 am

Die Casting for Aluminum Die Casting Parts. There are many methods with which manufacturers can produce aluminum cast parts. They can choose to go with sand casting, gravity-fed casting, investment casting, or permanent mold casting, just to name a few. However, it is die casting that manufacturers go for. Moreover, more than any other metal alloys available, they choose to go with aluminum alloys. In fact, in the United States alone, around two-and-a-half billion dollars worth of aluminum cast parts made from die casting is produced every year. The die casting process mainly involves the forcing of molten aluminum metal into cavities in order to make molds, which are referred to as dies, hence the name.

Aluminum cast parts from the die casting process are best produced in large quantities of small parts. Castings can weigh as much as fifty kilograms, but aluminum part castings usually weight at around five kilograms. Costs in high tooling and casting equipment are completely justified and are in fact relatively cheaper than those used by other casting methods.

Various applications of aluminum cast parts made with die casting typically include aluminum die casting alloys such as Alloy 380.0, Alloy A380.0, Alloy 360.0, Alloy 413.0, and Alloy 518.1, among many others. Once these alloys are turned into aluminum cast parts, they are used for lawnmower housings, streetlamp housings, dental equipment, gear, typewriter frames, cover plates, frying skillets, instrument cases, auto parts, connecting rods, pistons, conveyor components, lit tings, aircraft and marine hardware, and escalator parts, to name some. The aluminum casting process is indeed one of the most useful processes in the metalworking industry today.

Cast Parts Company
6918 Beck Avenue
North Hollywood, CA. 91605
818-982-9386 Phone *
Sales@Cast-Parts.com.

March 1, 2009

Aluminum’s journey from the Paleolithic to the Modern world

Filed under: Aluminum Casting Parts,Cast Parts,Die Casting Company — Tags: — admin @ 1:13 am

Aluminum’s journey from the Paleolithic to the Modern world

The history of the world is closely related to man’s use of metal tools. From the Paleolithic Era which is the first recorded use of stone tools, on to the Neolithic or New Stone Age with the improvement of these tools, and the end of this era being a revolution in tool use with metal tools becoming widespread. The next step for the revolution of tool use was the Copper Age, then the Bronze Age, then the Iron Age. These were the first metals.

Aluminum wasn’t widely used by man till the 19th century with scientific breakthroughs facilitating its rise towards being the most widely used metal today. Without aluminum, airplanes and automobiles would be costly and impractical to develop. The aerospace industry wouldn’t have its shuttles. Even such simple things as aluminum foil, aluminum cans, and modern food packaging need the metal.

Aluminum cast parts are in such modern objects as the computer you are using, the mobile phone you bring with you, the kitchen utensil you used for lunch today, and a lot more of our regular daily objects. The aluminum castings process developed by the science of metallurgy involves the heating of the metal and the pouring of the molten material into a pre-designed mold. This is how aluminum part castings are made. The process is repeated a hundredfold to make the parts needed to supply the world with this miracle metal.

Many years ago, aluminum was not that widely used. Extraction of the metal was difficult and costly. It was already regarded as a useful metal, but it was too expensive. Nowadays, thanks to a handful of scientists and engineers and pioneers, aluminum is here to stay.

Cast Parts Die Casting Company
6918 Beck Avenue
North Hollywood, CA. 91605
818-982-9386 Phone * Sales@Cast-Parts.com.

February 13, 2009

The irony of aluminum

The irony of aluminum

Aluminum cans, foil, silver paint. All these would not exist if aluminum were not present in the earth’s crust. Alternatively, they would be very expensive if Charles Martin Hall and Paul Héroult did not discover electrolysis, which is the method of extracting the metal from its ore nowadays. Fortunately, they did discover it. The Hall-Héroult process for the production of aluminum is the foremost process used in the metalworking industry today.

For the further commercial use of this abundant metal, metalworkers use the aluminum casting process to mass produce aluminum alloys. Die molding, hot isostatic pressing,
sand casting, composite mold casting, continuous mold casting, permanent mold casting, centrifugal casting, investment casting, and plaster casting; this is a list of the many ways of aluminum part castings. These metal parts have a number of uses in the aeronautic, automobile, electronic, and electrical industries. Die Cast Tooling.

Due to this silvery lightweight metal’s incredible versatility, aluminum cast parts are also found in such gadgets as transistors, computers, mobile phones, lawnmowers, cars, escalators, aircraft, conveyor belts, streetlamps, and some dental equipment. In addition, aluminum compounds are used in the production of glass, ceramics, antiperspirants, synthetic rubber, paint, paper, cosmetics, varnishes, and leather tanning.

If science and technology did not go forward as it did, aluminum would still be more expensive than gold today. The irony of aluminum is that of all the metals in the world it is the most abundant one, but it could not have been used as it is used today without a cost-efficient method of extracting the metal.

Cast Parts Die Casting Company
6918 Beck Avenue
North Hollywood, CA. 91605
818-982-9386 Phone * Sales@Cast-Parts.com.

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