Eureka
Home Advertise Magazine Events Eureka TV Directory
  


Subscribe




Reverse prototyping makes better castings
11/06/2002 Email to a friend   Comment on this article
Die castings can be in production quicker than ever before, and die designs and components evaluated before commitment is made to production tooling. Tom Shelley reports



Reverse prototyping makes better castingsMay 2002 notebook: Reverse prototyping makes better castings

Die castings can be in production quicker than ever before, and die designs and components
evaluated before commitment is made to production tooling. Tom Shelley reports

A research project has resulted in the ability to create pressure die casting moulds in a week or two, using laminated assemblies of laser-cut steel sheet.
Not only can the moulds be made more quickly, they can also be constructed with enhanced cooling channels, permitting easier manufacture of castings with thinner sections and other potential problem features.
The project, which began in 1994, is named RADICAL: Rapid laminated die casting tooling for the automotive industry. The research has been conducted by DeMontfort and Warwick universities, and research fellow Andy Norwood revealed recently some early results of the work at a seminar at Warwick, organised by the Foresight Vehicle Design and Manufacturing Processes Thematic Group.
The research takes an idea, originally conceived in the 1970s by Professor Takeo Nagakawa, for making laminated deep-drawing dies. The idea was to come up with a faster method of making die casting moulds that would be easier to handle.
The designs are produced with the aid of standard rapid prototyping software, but working in reverse to produce slice by slice moulds instead of slice by slice products. Experiments have been conducted with unbonded assemblies of laminations and assemblies bonded together by nickel brazing in a vacuum furnace.
Die casting LM24 aluminium alloy, in an unbonded mould made of 1mm thick sheets of H13 tool steel, encountered no problems using gravity methods in the production of an initial 150 castings. This has been followed by gravity casting tests with a mould made of 66 laminations of 1mm H13 brazed together at 1,020°C. Nuneaton-based KTN has so far successfully used the mould to produce more than 2,000 gravity castings of a simple cone component.
The next phase was the manufacture of a TRW brake master cylinder. The mould was prepared by taking DXF CAD files of the product, subtracting it from a block, and applying Delcam's latest slicing software. The TRW die has produced 100 components to date. Comparative trials are now being made with bonded and unbonded moulds, sliced vertically and horizontally, with and without application of additional pressure.
One of the advantages of the approach, already established in the making of plastic injection moulds for the Contura Process, is that it is easier to incorporate cooling channels. Instead of being drilled out as round holes, the channels can be cut out of the sheets, with upper and lower surfaces parallel with sections of casting to be cooled. It is, therefore, possible to cool evenly thin sections of casting, leading to reduced cooling times. In trials, solidification times have been reduced from 3 to 0.7s, increasing production by 11%. Tools can be made very large, without incurring a heavy weight or cost penalty, and would appear to be particularly suited to the manufacture of electronic heat sinks.
(More information at www.foresightvehicle.org.uk/
programme/design01.asp) The Contura Process is available commercially in the UK through Bayer.

Producing a mould from laminations allows it to be made much more quickly, directly from CAD data, using standard rapid prototyping software and a laser cutter

The mould can be made lighter in weight and cooling can be greatly enhanced

The manufacture of shapes with thin sections and other features is less of a problem

 
Author
Tom Shelley
 
 
This material is protected by Findlay Media copyright 2012.
See Terms and Conditions.
One-off usage is permitted but bulk copying is not.
For multiple copies contact the sales team.
 
Bookmark this article using:
 
Del.icio.us digg reddit Facebook StumbleUpon
 
 
Your comments / feedback
Do you have any comments or feedback on this article? Please contact us by filling in the form below.
NameHide name
Your Email Address
Comments
Send
Your comments/feedback may be edited prior to publishing. Not all entries will be published.
Terms and Conditions

To comment on news stories or blogs you need to complete our 60 second registration process. Once completed this then allows you to download any and all white papers, register for e-zines and access our detailed supplier directory for FREE.

If you are all ready a registered user then enter your e-mail address and login.

You will need to have logged in prior to entering your comments in the boxes provided.

Please enter your email address to login and gain free access to this site.
 
If you are using this site for the first time registration is quick and completely free.
 
Register Now - Register Now


Email Address :  

Remember Me: - If this box is ticked you will be automatically logged in when you return.

Important: To protect your privacy, do not select 'Remember Me' if other users have access to the computer you are using.

View Privacy Policy
 
Related Companies
Delcam plc
 
Bayer plc
 
 
Related News
Graphene based composite could provide less toxic way of rust-proofing steel
 
Tata Steel to invest £800million in Welsh plants
 
Novel material could make cars lighter and cheaper to run
 
New material combines best qualities of copper and metal foam
 
Container benefits from longest ever Edbro telescopic cylinders
 
 
Related Technology
Advanced Engineering Show 2011: Adressing material shortcomings
 
Keeping it steel
 
Metals work with composites for aerospace
 
New steels set challenging problems
 
Composites and metals combine for strength
 
 
Related Technology Spotlight
Award-Winning Gripple Uses PTC’s CAD & FEA Tools to Cut Design Time
 
 
Related Whitepapers
Why is engineering fluid dynamics the right choice for CFD analysis?