Investment casting or 'lost wax
process' is an industrial
process which employs in-process control at every point.
Highly refined on-line process control methods are
backed up with laboratory skill. Every casting
shipped--and this applies equally to orders for a dozen
castings or half a million--can be relied on to meet the
designer's performance specification.
Below is a graphical step-by-step
representation of the investment casting process.
PATTERN PRODUCTION - The
process begins with production of a one-piece
heat-disposable pattern. This pattern is made by
injecting wax into a metal die. A pattern is
required for each casting. These disposable
patterns have the exact geometry of the required
finished part, but they are made slightly
larger, to compensate for volumetric shrinkage
in the pattern production state and during
solidification of metal in the ceramic mold.
PATTERN ASSEMBLY - Patterns are fastened on
to one or more runners and the runners are
attached to the pouring cup. Patterns, runners
and pouring cups comprise the cluster or tree,
which is needed to produce the ceramic mold. The
number of runners per section and their
arrangement on the pouring cup can vary
considerably, depending on alloy type, size, and
configuration of the casting.
CERAMIC SHELL MOLD PROCESS - The ceramic
shell mold technique involves dipping the entire
cluster into a ceramic slurry, draining it, then
coating it with fine ceramic sand. After drying,
this process is repeated again and again, using
progressively coarser grades of ceramic
material, until a self-supporting shell has been
formed.
REMOVING THE WAX - The coated cluster is
placed in a high temperature furnace where the
pattern melts and runs out through the gates,
runners and pouring cup. This leaves a ceramic
shell containing cavities of the casting shape
desired with passages leading to them.
CASTING - The ceramic shell molds must be
fired to burn out the last traces of pattern
material and to preheat the mold in preparation
for casting usually in the range of 1600 to 2000
degrees Fahrenheit. The hot molds may be poured
with the assistance of vacuum, pressure and/or
centrifugal force. This enables reproduction of
the most intricate details and extremely thin
walls of an original wax pattern.
CLEANING - After the poured molds have
cooled, the mold material is removed from the
casting cluster. This is done by mechanical
vibration, abrasive blasting, and chemical cleaning.
CASTING REMOVAL - Individual castings are
then removed from the cluster by means of
cut-off wheels and any remaining protrusions
left by gates or runners are removed by
belt-grinding.
FINISHING - The castings are then ready for
secondary operations such as: heat treating,
straightening, machining, finishing, inspection,
non-destructive testing, and then shipment to the customer.