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SFSA: Framework for Designing
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Conceptual Framework for Designing Metal Casting
Author: Mr. Mike Gwyn; PELTON Casteel, Inc.
One of the basic principles of the " system approach " in
engineering design is to define the system boundaries in such a way
that conflicting requirements can be recognized and resolved.
Understanding the differing mind-sets (An overview)
Design Engineer
Foundry Engineer
Conclusions
Elements of Conceptual Framework
Understanding the differing mind-sets (An overview)
Well-designed castings are known for being functional and cost
efficient. Yet those directly involved in
designing and producing castings know that the principles behind
well designed castings are difficult to pin down.
" Rules of thumb " abound that attempt to define fillets,
radii, changes of casting section, minimum section thickness,
tolerance capability, etc.
Yet, there are regularly casting designs that seem to violate the
" rules " successfully. These designs typically have
combinations of geometry that should not work, but that do.
On the other hand, design engineers observing this attempt to take
latitudes with geometry that seem well founded only find that their
design is either not consistently castable or is castable, but at a
price that is too high.
This has been a mystery for many, many years that has frustrated
design engineers, aggravated foundrymen who attempt to produce
troublesome designs, and caused other forms of metal products to
be designed when a casting would be the best product -- if
properly designed.
First, we must look at the view point of each engineer:
Design Engineer
Design Engineers typically consider functional mechanical elements,
loads, function environment, failure modes, mechanical and physical
properties, fabricated shapes, automated secondary operations and
cosmetics.
Foundry Engineer
The metalcasters, patternmakers, and die engineers see fluid flow,
heat transfer and solidification patterns in the mold, including hot
spots as the metal changes from the liquid phase to the solid phase;
they see possibilities for infinite variability in casting shape. They
also see foundry tooling (patterns, dies, and/or core boxes) that are
critical to dimensional accuracy and consistency. They see surfaces to
be machined; other surfaces that must be consistent dimensionally for
machining fixturing and targeting. They see possibilities for specific
alloys and heat treatments that are needed for the casting's
mechanical and physical properties. They see the need for pleasant
casting as-cast cosmetics.
Finally, when the design geometry and the alloy's castability are in
conflict with each other, the metalcaster must consider " thermal
trickery, " which is the use of chills, insulating, exothermic
materials and other heat transfer gimmicks to set up necessary
solidification patterns in the casting which are not possible from the
casting geometry itself.
Conclusions:
Based on these widely differing viewpoints, it would be surprising to
find good casting designs to be obvious and trivial. In fact,
cost-effective casting design is a technically demanding task for the
design engineer.
One of the basic principles of the " system approach " in
engineering design is to define the system boundaries in such a way
that conflicting requirements can be recognized and resolved. This is
the principle that we are applying here. As our conceptual framework
is explained, it will become apparent that geometry holds the key to
resolving the design conflict identified within properly defined system
boundaries.
Elements of Conceptual Framework
Physical and Mechanical Characteristics
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Four important physical characteristics affect
the castability and performance of any given casting alloy. These are:
Fluid life
Solidification Shrinkage
Slag and/or dross formation tendency
Pouring temperatures
Each of these characteristics vary widely among alloys and be
be significantly different among similar alloys. Differences among
these four physical characteristics significantly affect the
geometry of well designed castings.
It is also important to understand two important mechanical
characteristics affecting the stiffness of any give casting design:
Modulus of elasticity
Section Modulus
The former is a function of the stiffness of the alloy itself and the
latter is a function of stiffness from the casting's geometry. These
two mechanical characteristics are also at the heart of well designed
geometry.
Metallurgical characteristics of alloys that effect geometry
Using these physical and mechanical characteristics
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Recognize that the above six characteristics affect important variables
in designing, producing and using metal castings. These variables
include:
Casting method
Design of casting sections
Design of junctions between casting sections
Internal integrity required
Dimensional tolerances and extent of near-net shape requirements
Cosmetic appearance
Casting geometry as a tool.
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Casting geometry is the most powerful tool available to
improve the following:
Castability of the alloy
Mechanical stiffness of the casting
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Carefully planned geometry can offset alloy problems in fluid life,
solidification shrinkage, pouring temperature and slag/dross formation
tendency. Section modulus from geometry has the power to offset
problems with lower modulus of elasticity.
What to avoid
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In developing a sound conceptual framework for casting design, it is
important to avoid reliance on some traditional concepts and
tools such as:
Rules of thumb
General " Do's and Don'ts " typical of casting design
handbooks
Simple, orthogonal shape thinking; such as building blocks from
mill shapes like plates, bars, tubes, I-beams, other kinds of
extrusions of constant cross section, etc.
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The above shapes limit metalcasting's power of infinite shape
variability. Casting geometry can be so much more free-flowing
than orthogonal, extruded, and rotated shapes.
Knowledge and Understanding
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Just as important as avoiding the above traditional tendencies in
design engineering is to know and understand the nature of molten
metal and use it to your advantage.
Embrace the idea of infinitely variable shape.
Use free-hand sketches for a conceptual designing. Move mass
around. Take mass out where it is not needed; put it where it
is necessary. Use variability of section modulus over length.
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Use the ability to vary section modulus over section length to
design for uniform stress.
Systems approach style to design thinking
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Develop a " systems approach " style to design thinking.
Such an approach encompasses everything, from the original need for a
mechanical or structural element, to molten metal flowing into a shape,
to the rough casting right out of the mold or die, through casting
finishing requirements, secondary processing in the foundry, secondary
processing at a subcontractor and/or the customer's plant, testing,
assembly, and final use and abuse of the product which contains the
casting.
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The only way to resolve conflicting requirements without a " Rube
Goldberg " result is to conceive the system needs at the outset.
When applied, the " system approach " style of thinking
results in truly cost-effective, simple, elegant metalcasting design.
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Last Modified: May, 2001
Copyright 1995 - 2001 by Steel Founders' Society Of America.
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