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Chapter 8 Overview. The quality of a die casting is more than skin deep A quality casting is free of defects In order to determine the quality of a casting, you must be able to identify the defects There are three common types of defects. Chapter 8 Objectives.
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Chapter 8 Overview • The quality of a die casting is more than skin deep • A quality casting is free of defects • In order to determine the quality of a casting, you must be able to identify the defects • There are three common types of defects
Chapter 8 Objectives • Correctly identify the common surface defects • Correctly identify the common internal defects • Correctly identify the common types of dimensional defects
New Terms • Inclusions • Materials that have been included in the alloy that should not be there, such as aluminum oxide, silicon carbide, fluxes and sludge • Polymorphic • The ability of, in certain environments, the properties of the alumina crystals to change drastically
New Terms cont. • Porosity • A void in the casting, caused by trapped gas or shrinkage • Viscous • The state of being semi-fluid; not flowing freely
Cold flow Cold shut Flow marks Cold Chill Severe chill Non-fill Poor-fill Laps Flow lines Swirls Knit lines Mis-run Surface Defects Flow Defects Other Defects • Blisters • Cracks • Soldering
Flow Defects • Result from how metal flows to and within the die • Adjusting process variables can sometimes impact their occurrence • The alloy begins to freeze before the casting is completely filled out • Several alloy flows converge but do not weld or fuse completely together
Fill time Wall thickness Die temperature Alloy temperature Flow distance Gate velocity Alloy type Venting Flow Defects cont. 8 Factors Affecting Flow Defects
8 Factors: Fill Time • The maximum allowable time to fill the die cavity that results in an acceptable casting • If exceeded, the casting will have some defect • Fill time calculation based on several factors • Die temperature • Alloy temperature • Casting geometry • Alloy being cast
8 Factors: Wall Thickness • Part of the casting’s geometry • Heavy wall sections equate to a lot of heat and high cooling requirements • Thin walls equate to very little heat and minimal cooling requirements
Flow Defects: Die Temperature • Time-averaged temperature of the die during sustained production • Cannot be measured any time at any place in the die • Ideally, it will: • Be as high as possible • Still permit making the casting • Vary as little as possible over the entire cycle
Flow Defects: Alloy Temperature • Temperature of the alloy as it begins to fill the die cavity, as it passes through the gate • Hard to measure in real time as the casting is being made • Estimated to determine fill time calculations • Avoiding delays in alloy transfer can minimize temperature losses
8 Factors: Flow Distance • The distance that the metal must flow once it passes through the gate • Alloy should flow to its terminal location without freezing • If the flow distance is too long and if the alloy speed is too slow, it’s difficult for the metal to fill the cavity without beginning to freeze
8 Factors: Gate Velocity • The speed the alloy travels as it passes through the gate • If not controlled, can be detrimental to the tooling causing washout and erosion • If too low, the alloy may not atomize and not have enough energy to reach the ends of the casting or to properly weld together
8 Factors: Alloy Type • Can make difference in the surface finish • Zinc, Zamak 7 was designed to have the best fluidity and surface finish • Silicon content in aluminum aids fluidity • Alloys closer to the eutectic will be more fluid • Eutectic alloys are regarded as harder to cast
8 Factors: Venting and Vacuum • Trapped air causes blisters and gas porosity and backpressure in the cavity • Back pressure can change the flow enough to cause surface defects • Most noticeable in blind features • May be necessary to add vacuum to remove gasses
Other Defects: Blisters • Bubble-like bumps on the casting • Gases trapped in the casting near the casting surface cause them • When casting is ejected and the casting surface is not strong enough to withstand the gas pressure, the surface yields and the blister forms
Other Defects: Cracks • Two major causes for cracks are: • Heat • Insufficient • Excessive • Externally applied stresses
Other Defects: Soldering • The fusion of aluminum in the alloy with iron from the steel surface of the die cavity • When soldering occurs, the casting sticks to the cavity; casting must be torn away • Aggravated by higher than usual die temperatures, high gate velocities and high metal pressures • Enhanced if the iron content in alloy is low • Can be caused by insufficient draft angles
Impact of Internal Defects • Mechanical properties include: • Tensile strength, elongation, hardness, impact strength and others • Measured on samples; results are published to help designers pick best suited material • Internal defects reduce mechanical properties
Impact of Internal Defects • Pressure tightness • An important property for some applications • The process has to be controlled while making solid, low porosity castings • Internal defects can cause loss of pressure tightness/leaks • Machineability • Affected by porosity and inclusion defects, the two types of internal defects
Internal Defects:Inclusions • Most inclusions are non-metallic aluminum oxide (corundum) • Oxides get into the bath • Most is removed, but some remains and ends up in castings • Size and shape of the individual corundum particles varies widely
Internal Defects:Inclusions-Oxide Films and Dross • Inclusions of oxide films and dross are major cause for leakers and excessive tool wear • This is generally gamma aluminum oxide • Oxide films prevent divergent alloy steams knitting together properly as the cavity fills
Internal Defects:Inclusions-SiC • Silicon carbide refractories get into castings if furnace-cleaning practices not maintained • As damaging as corundum • Encountered infrequently compared to corundum • Distinguished by its very black, glass-like coloring
Internal Defects:Inclusions-Flux • Not usually recognized during a cursory visual inspection • Casting must be submerged in city water overnight • If flux inclusions are present, they will grow crystals on the casting surface • Appears as light mottling on all surfaces
Internal Defects:Inclusions-Sludge • Composed of complex inter-metallic compounds of Al-Si-Fe-Mn-Cr • Is quite hard and will damage cutter tooling • Under high magnification sludge is easily recognized by the extremely fine primary crystals and their pentagonal shape
Internal Defects:Porosity • A void in the casting • Has two root causes: • Trapped gas • Shrinkage
Internal Defects:Porosity-Trapped Gas To solve a gas porosity problem, look at all sources of gas generation • Trapped air • Always present because of the turbulent method used to fill the die cavity • Air in cold chamber • minimized by filling the cold chamber with alloy
Internal Defects:Porosity-Trapped Gas • Turbulence: when alloy is subjected to turbulence in the presence of air • Minimize when picking up and transporting alloy to the cold chamber through ladling practices • Slow portion of the shot cycle must be controlled • Optimize timing of plunger • Accelerate plunger tip when past pour hole • When sleeve is filled, follow with a smooth acceleration to the fast shot speed
Internal Defects:Porosity-Trapped Gas • Improper venting: another cause for trapped air • Vents must be open to allow air trapped above the alloy in cold chamber to escape • If vent is working, a puff of air coming out can be seen
Internal Defects:Porosity-Trapped Gas • Excessive lubricants: can result in gas from two sources • Release of combustion products when some of the die lube burns when the alloy hits • Most releases are diluted with water • Water in lube will turn to steam and produce a great volume of gas • Gas forms when alloy runs over puddled plunger tip lube
Internal Defects:Porosity-Trapped Gas • Other sources of trapped gas • If die cavity cracked, it might allow fluid from the cooling line to leak into die cavity • Water or oil in the cavity, when hit by the alloy, will form gas
Internal Defects:Porosity-Shrinkage • Shrinkage: porosity that occurs if the alloy solidifies without pressure on it • All alloys shrink a certain percentage • High pressure die casting • Uses intensifiers/other methods to increase alloy pressure once cavity has been filled with alloy • Alloy pressure must be transmitted from the biscuit through the runner to the gate
Internal Defects:Porosity-Shrinkage • Shrink defects: occur at the last place in the casting to freeze • characterized by a rough and jagged appearance • tends to be continuous by nature
Dimensional Defects • Dimensional variations covered: • Linear variation, across parting line variation, shift and mismatch, warpage • Most dimensional defects related to: • Die temperatures • Condition of the die • Force of injection
Dimensional Defects:Die Temperature • Thermal expansion/contraction: objects lengthen when heated, get smaller when cooled • Castings get smaller when cooled • Dimensional problem can occur when one half of die is much hotter than other half • Can be a problem for the die and the casting
Dimensional Defects:Die Condition • Flash Buildup at parting line • Prevents the die from closing properly • May cause an oversize dimension • Prevents wedgelock from holding slide in place • Flash buildup at front of slide • Prevents slide from going to “ready to cast” position
Dimensional Defects:Die Condition • Soldering • Small core pins can be very susceptible; solder buildup can cause an oversize out-of-tolerance condition • May occur in walls; could cause an undersize or thin wall
Dimensional Defects:Force of Injection • Force of injection • Overcomes locking capability, causing tie bars stretch and allowing die to flash • Flashing adds to size, cause slides to backout • Normal injection force, impact, and intensification • Can: • Reduce the mass and speed • Minimize impact • Apply intensification before gates freeze
Dimensional Defects • Statistical dimensional control • Product gets larger or smaller over time • Process variables that contribute to the dimensional variation need to be identified • A control technique, such as the average and range chart, needs to be applied
Summary • 3 categories of defects: surface, internal, and dimensional, and many defects in each • The operator may or may not have control over them • 2 subcategories of surface defects: flow and other • There are many types of flow defects
Summary cont. • 2 subcategories of internal defects: inclusions and porosity • Dimensional defects are related to die temperatures, die condition, and the injection force