Die casting is a precision casting process that offers designers tremendous versatility. By understanding both the capabilities and limitations of the process, product designers can leverage it to produce intricately shaped parts with tight tolerances. Let's take a closer look at how it works and some of its most common applications.
What is Die Casting?
In it, molten metal is forced under high pressure into reusable molds called dies. The metal solidifies within the dies to take on the desired shape. It enables manufacturers to consistently produce parts with minimal draft angles, complex geometries, close tolerances, and smooth surfaces. Common casting alloys include zinc, aluminum, magnesium, and copper-based materials.
The key equipment in casting includes furnaces to melt the metal, holding pots to keep it molten, shot sleeves or chambers to contain and inject the liquid metal, and the die cavities themselves. Shot sizes can range from less than an ounce up to hundreds of pounds depending on the process and application. Precision Die Casting is capable of achieving tolerances as close as ±0.001 inch.
Advantages
There are several attributes that make it an attractive manufacturing process:
- Complex Shapes: It lends itself well to producing parts with undercuts, hollow sections, intricate details, and tight radii. It is one of the few casting methods capable of such geometric versatility.
- Smooth Finishes: The molten metal fills the die completely and uniformly, resulting in a smooth surface finish directly from the cast part in many cases. Additional machining may not be required.
- Dimensional Accuracy: By controlling all variables very precisely, die casters can achieve repeatable tolerances down to +/- 0.001 inch on linear dimensions and angles.
- Production Efficiency: With automated production cells, die casters can crank out hundreds or thousands of parts per hour in a single shot process. This leads to lower per-part production costs compared to alternative manufacturing methods for high-volume parts.
- Materials Variety: Aluminum, zinc, magnesium, copper, and even exotic alloys like Cebal can be die cast. Designers have a wide selection of material properties to choose from.
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