Shell mold casting is a metal casting process similar to sand casting, in that molten metal is poured into an expendable mold. However, in shell mold casting, the mold is a thin-walled shell created from applying a sand-resin mixture around a pattern. The pattern, a metal piece in the shape of the desired part, is reused to form multiple shell molds. A reusable pattern allows for higher production rates, while the disposable molds enable complex geometries to be cast. Shell mold casting requires the use of a metal pattern, oven, sand-resin mixture, dump box, and molten metal.
Shell mold casting allows the use of both ferrous and non-ferrous metals, most commonly using cast iron, carbon steel, alloy steel, stainless steel, aluminum alloys, and copper alloys. Typical parts are small-to-medium in size and require high accuracy, such as gear housings, cylinder heads, connecting rods, and lever arms.
The shell mold casting process consists of the following steps:
CAPABILITIES
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TYPICAL |
FEASIBLE |
Shapes: |
Thin-walled: Complex |
Flat |
Part size: |
Weight: 0.5 oz. - 220 lb |
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Materials: |
Metals |
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Surface finish - Ra: |
50 - 300 μin |
32 - 500 μin |
Tolerance: |
± 0.015 in. |
± 0.006 in. |
Max wall thickness: |
0.06 - 2.0 in. |
0.06 - 2.0 in. |
Quantity: |
1000 - 1000000 |
100 - 1000000 |
Lead time: |
Weeks |
Days |
Advantages: |
Can form complex shapes and fine details |
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Disadvantages: |
High equipment cost |
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Applications: |
Cylinder heads, connecting rods |