China Lost Wax Casting

Home About us Products Equipment Contact us Guestbook Links Sitemap  
 
Investment Casting by SIMIS Precision Casting,Superalloy Casting and Lost Wax Casting!
  Investment Casting by SIMIS Precision Casting | Superalloy Casting and Lost Wax Casting! Home > Products > Stainless Steel Casting > Lost Wax Casting
Lost wax casting manufacturer,Lost wax casting exporter,Lost wax casting supplier, Lost wax casting producer,Lost wax casting factory,China SIMIS, From Taiyuan, Shanxi,China. Tens of thousands Lost wax casting products is turned out by our factories every year.
 
Lost Wax Casting
 
Lost Wax Casting
 
 

We mainly use silicasol shell lost wax casting process to produce stainless steel casting with the material of austenitic stainless steel casting and martensitic stainless steel casting, 17-4PH and so on. All of our stainless steel castings are widely used in almost all of the industry fields.

We mainly manufactures superalloy investment casting, stainless steel casting, carbon steel lost wax casting, alloy steel investment casting, aluminum investment casting, copper lost wax casting and cast iron investment casting through lost wax casting process. Its products, such as turbocharger or supercharger, turbine blade, turbo impeller, nozzle, stainless steel valve, stainless steel pipe fittings, flanges, marine hardware, automotive parts and construction hardware, are widely used in almost all kinds of industry fields, such as aviation engine, aerospace engine, gas turbine, ship, metallurgy, petroleum, automotive, medical and construction.

Insisting on seeking development with science and technology and surviving on high quality, Simis Investment Casting Company honestly welcome internal and external clients to cooperate with us.

 
 

Q: What is meant by "lost wax" casting, and how is it done?

A: The origins of the lost wax process are shrouded in antiquity, but it has been used for thousands of years to produce objects in metal which could not be produced any other way, due to the complexity of their form. It permits anything that can be modelled in wax to be faithfully transmuted into metal, and is still used today for certain industrial parts, dental restorations, fine jewelry, and sculpture.

While wax patterns were originally modelled by hand, and this can still be done, it is now possible to cast wax into molds as well, so that multiple copies may be made even though the wax pattern is lost in the process. Modern synthetic rubbers have been developed which capture very fine detail and can flex to release undercut areas of a model, greatly reducing the number of mold parts and the number of parting lines necessary, when compared to the earlier technique of using wet plaster molds. Waxes can be cast either solid or hollow, as the wax will coat the inside of a mold after it is filled and poured out. This process is repeated to build up the desired thickness of wax. The process is slightly different for jewelry and sculpture; the smaller quantities involved when making jewelry-sized pieces necessitate some adaptations to overcome the effects of surface tension, such as wax injection instead of simple pouring, and the use of a vacuum table or centrifugal casting machine to force metal into molds.

After it is made and touched-up, the wax model is attached to a "pour-cup", which is funnel-shaped to channel the metal into the mold from the outside, using "gates"or "sprues" made from rods of wax , and a venting system is made the same way to convey air and other gasses out of the mold when it is filled with hot metal. Once the model is set up with its gates and vents, it is surrounded with a material that will cover it smoothly when wet and withstand high temperatures when baked. In some places an ancient technique involving cow-dung and clay is still used; a very fine mixture is painted on to capture the detail, then coarser layers are added to build up a mold that can be handled, baked, and poured into.

A modern variation on this method is called "ceramic shell"; instead of the cow-dung and clay, a silicaceous slurry is used to cover the model by dipping and/or pouring. Special dry aggregate is then applied to the wet pattern, either by hand or by using a "fluidized bed", which blows the dry particles around in a confined space, covering the wet areas until no more will adhere. The coated pattern is then left to dry a while and another layer of wet and dry material is applied. This is repeated, using coarser aggregate on the outermost layers, until a sufficient thickness has built up so the mold will hold together through the burn-out and pouring.

The other method commonly used is called "investment" casting. The pattern is set up in much the same way as for ceramic shell, except that more venting is necessary due to the decreased porosity of the mold material, which is made using gypsum plaster (plaster of Paris) as a binder for sand, silica flour, or another refractory aggregate. There are many proprietary investment mixtures available, or one may choose to mix one's own. The dry ingredients are mixed with water and poured into a container or "flask" surrounding the gated model, which is either waxed down to a board or attached to a commercially available rubber device which holds the pattern and flask. Jewelry flasks are generally placed in a vacuum chamber while this mixure is still fluid, where they are boiled at room temperature to remove air-bubbles clinging to the models. It is helpful to de-air the investment mixture before pouring it over the wax models, in order to reduce boiling-over when vacuuming.

Once the plaster mixture has set hard, the flasks are placed in a kiln, slowly heated to between 1000 and 1250 degrees F, and held at that temperature until all wax residues have disappeared. The place where the wax was is now a void- hence the "lost wax" designation for this process. The metal is then melted and the molds are filled with liquid bronze or whatever metal is being used. The flask is then allowed to cool, then the plaster mold is broken away, revealing the metal part, which faithfully reproduces every detail of the original wax, plus the gates and vents, which must be cut off. Silver, gold, aluminum, brass, or bronze may be used interchangably with this method. Special investment materials and melting equipment are necessary to deal with the higher temperatures of platinum, iron or stainless steel, but the process is much the same. Lower-melting metals such as tin, lead, and zinc may also be cast by this method, but there are other easier methods of casting them, so it is not often done. A variation on the lost-wax method is also used for casting objects in glass.

Lost Wax Casting Processes By Simis

lost wax casting

Did you ever wonder or even consider just how an article of jewelry is made? Some are fabricated from metal sheet and wire or a combination of such components, adhering to purely metals processes. There are, however, forms so complex that one would be better served to approach using an alternative process. What will be discussed here are those procedures involved in taking the preliminary wax model and transforming it to a metal replica of the piece of jewelry to be. What follows will provide a brief description of the lost wax casting process as well as different approaches to it.


Working With Waxes

There are many varieties of wax, each developed with particular applications in mind. Some waxes may be carved while others may be shaped by hand, some cut from flat sheets, others twisted, melted, heated, engraved, textured, or fashioned by any number of methods to define shapes and details in the wax. This area is quite broad and merits its own pages which will be developed at a later point in time. For now, let us assume we already have one or more finished waxes that represent exactly the form of the object or objects we have envisioned and are trying to achieve.

Spruing

lost wax casting

The term "sprue" generally refers to a wax rod or series of these rods that secure the wax model to a specifically configured rubber or plastic base that is called a sprue base. In the center of the base is a wax insert to which is attached one or more waxes that are to be cast. On the outside is a lip that is used to secure a stainless steel cylinder into which the investment will be poured. The term, "to sprue" refers to the development of a spruing strategy as well as the act of physically attaching the sprues to the waxes and these to the sprue bases. This process must be approached with care and considerable thoughtfulness.

Once the waxes have been securely attached to the sprue base using sprue rods, a stainless steel flask is carefully inserted inside the outer lip of the sprue base, so as to surround the waxes while still leaving, minimally, a quater inch space between the wax and the inside of the flask. The flask pictured here is the perforated variety, intended for vacuum casting which will be described shortly. In this case, a sleeve must be placed around the outside of the flask to prevent investment from spilling out as it hardens before moving on to our next step. A flask used for centrifugal casting is straight sided with no perforations, simplifying the process of investing the waxes.

Stainless Steel Casting
Stainless Steel Pipe Fittings
Stainless Steel Valve
CNC Machined Stainless Steel Cas...
Alloy Steel Investment Casting
Superalloy Investment Casting
Aluminum Investment Casting
Copper Lost Wax Casting
Ductile Iron Investment Casting
Carbon Steel Lost Wax Casting
Machining Equipments
Casting Equipments
Test Equipments

Taiyun Simis Investment Casting Co., Ltd.

Add:
No. 1003 of Quanshun Mansion, No.15 Jiucheng Street,Jiefang Road, Taiyuan City, Shanxi China
Post code: 030001
Tel: 0086-351-4063799
Fax: 0086-351-4063773
Msn: stella_north@hotmail.com
E-mail:
market@investment-casting.biz
stella-north@163.com

★Ferrous Metals

  • Carbon Steel
  • Alloy Steel
  • Stainless Steel
  • Tool Steel
  • HSLA Steel
  • Steels for strength
  • Iron-based Superalloys
  • Investment Casting
  • Copyright 2006 Investment Casting by SIMIS Precision Casting Co.,Ltd.
    Tel: 0086-351-4063799    Fax: 0086-351-4063773    E-mail: market@investment-casting.biz  stella-north@163.com
    Add: No. 1003 of Quanshun Mansion, No.15 Jiucheng Street,Jiefang Road, Taiyuan City, Shanxi China    Post code:030001
    A professional manufacturer and exporter of various investment castings produced by lost wax casting process.