GB2024677A - Apparatus for and methods of casting - Google Patents

Apparatus for and methods of casting Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2024677A
GB2024677A GB7921190A GB7921190A GB2024677A GB 2024677 A GB2024677 A GB 2024677A GB 7921190 A GB7921190 A GB 7921190A GB 7921190 A GB7921190 A GB 7921190A GB 2024677 A GB2024677 A GB 2024677A
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GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
mould
metal
vacuum
glass
frangible
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Granted
Application number
GB7921190A
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GB2024677B (en
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Cabot Corp
Original Assignee
Cabot Corp
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Cabot Corp filed Critical Cabot Corp
Publication of GB2024677A publication Critical patent/GB2024677A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2024677B publication Critical patent/GB2024677B/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B23MACHINE TOOLS; METAL-WORKING NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • B23KSOLDERING OR UNSOLDERING; WELDING; CLADDING OR PLATING BY SOLDERING OR WELDING; CUTTING BY APPLYING HEAT LOCALLY, e.g. FLAME CUTTING; WORKING BY LASER BEAM
    • B23K35/00Rods, electrodes, materials, or media, for use in soldering, welding, or cutting
    • B23K35/40Making wire or rods for soldering or welding
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B22CASTING; POWDER METALLURGY
    • B22DCASTING OF METALS; CASTING OF OTHER SUBSTANCES BY THE SAME PROCESSES OR DEVICES
    • B22D23/00Casting processes not provided for in groups B22D1/00 - B22D21/00

Abstract

A method and apparatus for forming metal articles, such as rods and tubes by aspiration casting is provided in which a hollow frangible mould, such as a glass tube, is immersed at one end in a molten metal bath, a vacuum is applied to the other end controlled with respect to temperature of the molten metal so as to fill the mould with a minimum of turbulence, the filled mould is withdrawn from the metal and the frangible mould is quenched to shatter and remove it from the metal article formed within while the metal is simultaneously quenched to give desired physical properties.

Description

SPECIFICATION Apparatus for the methods of casting This invention relates to apparatus and methods of casting and particularlyto a method of aspiration casting of articles such as welding rods or wire.
Aspiration or suction casting of metal is not new.
For example U. S. Patents 1,488,545.1,514,909.
1,763,710. 1,825,958.2,379,401. 2,537,625 and 3,583,471 all describe moulds and methods of casting by this means. Patents 2,537,625 and 3,583,471 specifically disclose methods for casting rods using vacuum as the driving force in the casting operation. There are, unfortunately, many problems inherent in such casting methods which have prevented their general adoption and use. One of the more desirable uses of such a method is the formation of welding rods out of molten superalloy compositions by aspiration of the molten metal into hollow glass tubes. One major problem in such practices is the removal of the frangible (glass) mould and at the same time retaining the most desirable physical and mechanical properties in the metal.This is particularly true in the case of boroncontaining alloys where appears to be an unfavourable chemical reaction between the glass tube, especially in the case of borosilicate glass tubes, and the boron-containing alloy. The unfavourable chemical reaction results in degraded metal product; for example, a portion of the glass adheres to the metal.
The mechanism of this reaction is not clearly understood, however its effects are clear.
We have developed methods for controlling the step of aspiration casting to provide uniform removal of the mould to provide undamaged, straight rods with smooth surfaces and thereby retaining the desired physical and mechanical characteristics in the metal, substantially free of harsh chemical reaction.
In the present invention we provide in a process of aspiration casting which includes the steps of attaching one end of a hollow frangible mould such as a tube to a source of vacuum, means controlling the vacuum so that on application of the vacuum, the bottom end of the mould experiences a controlled increase in vacuum such that most the turbulence in the fluid flow which results in surface defects is eliminated, submerging the other end of the mould into a metal bath to be cast, applying vacuum to said mould at a level related to the temperature of the metal so that the metal rises rapidly within the mould, removing the mould from the molten metal bath while maintaining it under vacuum until solidified, the improvement which comprises quenching and rapidly cooling said frangible mould to cause it to break away from the metal contained therein and at the same time to quench the metal in the mould to reain the desired physical and mechanical characteristics, and removing said mould from said solidified article.
Accordingly, therefore, the present invention provides, from one aspect a method of aspiration forming a metal article including the steps of: a. attaching one end of a hollow frangible mould to a source of vacuum.
b. immersing the other end of said mould in molten metal to be cast.
c. adjusting the vacuum and the temperature of the molten metal so that said mould can be substantially filled with a minimum of turbulence priorto solidification.
d. applying vacuum to said one end of the mould to draw molten metal into the mould.
e. removing the mould from the molten metal while maintaining vacuum thereon until the metal in the mould has solidified into a desired article.
f. quenching the frangible mould and metal therein to cause the mould to break and separate from the article and to retain in the metal therein desired physical charactistics, and g. removing the broken mould from the metal.
Preferably, the mould and contents are removed vertically from the molten bath and then moved to the discharge station by slowly accelerating to a maximum and then decelerating slowly to a stop in a sine wave fashion which prevents the mould and contained metal from bending or breaking during the removal step. Preferably also glass tubes are used as the moulds in this invention and they are most preferably of borosilicate glass composition. In the preferred practice of this invention a surge tank or accumulator is used in the vacuum line to establish a predetermined vacuum at the time aspiration begins, and thus avoid the sudden changes in vacuum which otherwise occurs when casting is started. The other or bottom end of the tubes which are immersed into the molten metal bath may be flared in frusto conical form to prevent or at least retard their closing under the high temperature.
This method may also be used to make hollow metal tubes by quickly withdrawing the filled frangible tube and releasing the vacuum to permit the molten metal to run out of the centre of the rod to form a hollow. Further, the process of this invention may be used to produce other shaped articles from a correspondingly shaped mould.
From another aspect the invention provides an apparatus which preferably includes a mould assembly station in which in a preferred embodiment, a plurality of glass tubes are assembled and held in spaced relation, a mandrel having a plurality of vertically moving side-by-side vacuum heads spaced apart a distance equal to that of the tubes in the assembly station adapted to engage at one end the plurality of hollow tubes to be filled under vacuum assembled at the assembly station, means for transferring said glass tubes from the assembly station to the vacuum heads, means for moving said mandrel over a molten bath of metal, indexing means stopping said mandrel over said bath with a head generally centered thereover, means for lowering and raising the centered head and thereby immersing and removing the other end of said glass tubes in said molten metal, means for applying vacuum to said centered head when the said other end of the glass tubes is immersed in the molten metal and maintaining said vacuum until the metal in said glass tubes has solidified, means for transfer ring filled tubes to a cooling means through a sine curve path of acceleration and deceleration, cooling and quenching means adapted suddenly to cool the glass tubes to cause them to crack from around the metal contained within them and to quench the metal therein to the desired physical characteristics, rod conveyor means beneath the cooling means receiving the metal rods and glass from the cooling means and permitting any separated broken glass to fall through, a glass conveyor means beneath and transverse to said rod conveyor receiving the broken glass falling through the rod conveyor, and glass remover means receiving the rods for removing remaining glass thereon.
The invention will now be more fully described with reference to the accompanying drawings in which: Figure 1 is a schematic view of an apparatus according to this invention.
Figure 2 is a side elevation of an aspiration rod forming apparatus of this invention.
Figure 3 is a side elevation view of the glass tube assembly unit.
Figure 4 is an end elevational view of the glass tube assembly unit and means for transferring the tubes to the mandrel.
Figure 5 is a vertical section through the rod forming apparatus of Figure 1.
Figure 6 is a top plan view of the glass tube assembly unit of Figure 3.
Figure 7 is a fragmentary section of the line VIl-VIl of Figure 6.
Figure 8 is a side elevation view partly in section of a glass tube as used in this invention, and Figure 9 is a side elevational view, partly in section, of a glass remover assembly.
Referring to the drawings there is illustrated a tube assembly unit 10 on which the glass tubes 11 are placed on their sides and delivered by toothed wheel 10a to spacer feed chain lob and then to a lift arm 12 having spaced fingers 13 which hold an array of twelve side-by-side spaced tubes. A mandrel 20 having twelve sides adapted for rotation in succes sive steps by motor drive 20a from a tube loading station 21 adjacent the tube assembly unit 10 to an aspiration station 22 and to an unloading station 23 is provided on a multiple stage telescopic fluid cylinder 14 within a vertical frame 15. Mandrel 20 is movable on vertical guides 16. The mandrel 20 is provided with twelve spaced apart heads 24 one on each side of the mandrel.Each head 24 is in turn provided with a plurality (preferably 12) vacuum chucks 25 adapted to receive one end of a glass tube 11 to be used for forming a metal rod. The glass tubes 11 are attached to the vacuum chucks 25 of a head 24 at the loading station 21. This is accom plished by rotating lift arm 12 from the horizontal position on tube assembly unit 10 to a vertical position beneath a head 24 with the glass tubes aligned with vacuum chucks 25. The tubes 11 are moved vertically upwardly into chucks 25 by pusher 26. The mandrel is then moved to bring head 24 to the aspiration station 22. Head 24 is slidably mounted on spaced rods 27 extending vertically on mandrel 20. An air cylinder 28 with piston 28a is mounted above mandrel 20 at the aspiration station.
Piston 28a is provided with a slotted end 28b which slides over the flange head 24a on pin 24b fixed on head 24. Moving pistion 28a in and out of cylinder 28 raises and lowers head 24 to submerge the free end of glass tubes 11 into the molten bath of metal 29 at aspiration station 22. When the free ends of glass tubes 11, which may be flared in frusto conical shape, are inserted into bath 29, vacuum is applied to the interior of the tubes through chucks 25 and through a surge tank from a source of vacuum, not shown. The temperature of the molten bath and the vacuum are correlated so as to draw metal into each glass tube for substantially its full length before solidification closes off the tube. The cylinder 28 is then actuated to raise piston 27a and head 24 so that the head 24 and attached glass tubes and metal are moved upwardly out of the metal bath.The mandrel is then moved circumferentially from above the metal bath to the unload station with a gradual acceleration and deceleration. A sine curve path is preferred as this form of motion has been found to be effective in preventing undue bending and breakage of the glass tubes and metal rods contained therein. While the head 24 is being raised vacuum is continuously applied to the tubes through vacuum fittings 25 to prevent metal from running out.
During the time one head is being loaded with tubes and another is being filled at the aspiration station, a second head 24 is located at the unload station 23 where water sprays 32 rapidly cool and shock the glass tubes causing them to shatter away from the formed metal rods 33 and quench the metal rods to the desired physical characteristics without any substantial chemical reaction between the glass and metal rods. The rods 33 are held in a vertical position by guide ribs 33a in tank 33b fall onto a conveyor 34 along with that portion of shattered glass which breaks away. The broken glass and rods are conveyed by conveyor 34. At the exit of conveyor 34 the glass falls to bin 37 while the rods continue on to a glass removal assembly 35. This glass removal assembly 35 subjects the glass to a multiplicity of closesly spaced teeth on rolls 36 which fracture the glass retained on the rods into small pieces and remove it from the metal rods. The glass is collected in bin 37 for removal and disposal and the rods are discharged onto a conveyor 38 to be carried to an inspection and sizing station, not shown.

Claims (11)

1. A method of aspiration forming a metal article including the steps of: a. attaching one end of a hollow frangible mould to a source of vacuum.
b. immersing the other end of said mould in molten metal to be cast.
c. adjusting the vacuum and the temperature of the molten metal so that the said mould can be substantially filled with a minimum of turbulence prior to solidification.
d. applying vacuum to said one end of the mould to draw molten metal into the mould.
e. removing the mould from the molten metal while maintaining vacuum thereon until the metal in the mould has solidified into a desired article.
f. quenching the frangible mould and metal therein to cause the mould to break and separate from the article and to retain in the metal therein desired physical characteristics, and g. removing the broken mould from the metal
2. A method as claimed in Claim 1 wherein the frangible mould is made of a thermally shock sensitive material which is at least partially shattered by cooling, and cooling the mould and metal by quenching in water.
3. A method as claimed in Claim 1 or Claim 2 wherein the frangible mould is made of glass which is at least partially shattered by cooling.
4. A method as claimed in Claim 3 wherein the glass mould is formed of borosilicate glass.
5. A method of any one of Claims 1 to 4 wherein the article is a rod and the mould is a tube.
6. A method of aspiration forming a metal article substantially as herein described.
7. An apparatus for aspiration casting of metals and the like comprising a mandrel having a plurality of vertically movable side by side vacuum heads, mould engaging means on each said head adapted to engage one end of each of a plurality of frangible moulds under vacuum, means for delivering a plurality of moulds to said head for engagement by said engaging means, means for moving said mandrel step-wise over a molten bath of metal, indexing meands stopping said mandrel with a head over said bath of metal, means on said mandrel for lowering and raising said head and appended moulds so that the other end of said moulds is immersed in the metal, means connected to said head for applying vacuum thereto when the moulds are immersed, cooling means for quenching the moulds and contained metal to cause the mould to fracture and to quench the metal to retain desired physical properties, and mould removal means breaking the mould on the metal into small pieces and removing the same.
8. An apparatus as claimed in Claim 7 wherein the mould is a glass tube and the article is a rod.
9. An apparatus as claimed in Claim 8 wherein the glass tube is borosilicate glass.
10. An apparatus as claimed in any one of Claims 7,8 or 9 wherein the cooling means is a water spray.
11. An apparatus for aspiration casting of metals substantially as herein described with reference to the drawings.
GB7921190A 1978-07-03 1979-06-18 Apparatus for and methods of casting Expired GB2024677B (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US92160678A 1978-07-03 1978-07-03

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB2024677A true GB2024677A (en) 1980-01-16
GB2024677B GB2024677B (en) 1982-09-15

Family

ID=25445675

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB7921190A Expired GB2024677B (en) 1978-07-03 1979-06-18 Apparatus for and methods of casting

Country Status (6)

Country Link
JP (1) JPS5510397A (en)
AU (1) AU4805679A (en)
BR (1) BR7904134A (en)
DE (1) DE2923252A1 (en)
FR (1) FR2430283A1 (en)
GB (1) GB2024677B (en)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR2550483A1 (en) * 1983-08-09 1985-02-15 Hauni Werke Koerber & Co Kg METHOD AND DEVICE FOR SEPARATING WORKPIECES FROM CLAMPING BLOCKS COMING FROM CAST
US4827583A (en) * 1984-10-27 1989-05-09 Korber Ag Apparatus for breaking up cast fixtures

Families Citing this family (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4458741A (en) * 1978-02-03 1984-07-10 Cabot Corporation Method of aspiration casting

Family Cites Families (13)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1488545A (en) * 1921-03-27 1924-04-01 Libbey Glass Mfg Co Suction mold
US1514909A (en) * 1922-03-27 1924-11-11 Libbey Glass Mfg Co Suction mold
US1825958A (en) * 1927-01-10 1931-10-06 Vacuum Casting Company Making metal articles
US1763710A (en) * 1928-06-02 1930-06-17 Vacuum Casting Company Metal-casting apparatus
US2379401A (en) * 1942-04-16 1945-06-26 American Steel Foundries Method and apparatus for casting metal
US2537625A (en) * 1947-01-09 1951-01-09 Firestone Tire & Rubber Co Wheel polishing machine
BE624414A (en) * 1961-11-14
GB1042594A (en) * 1962-11-05 1966-09-14 Ass Elect Ind The casting of thin rods
US3583471A (en) * 1968-12-17 1971-06-08 Erich Kemming Manufacture of carbide-containing welding rods
FI46810C (en) * 1969-12-15 1973-07-10 Outokumpu Oy Device for upward drainage of rods, plates, pipes, etc.
JPS5240430A (en) * 1975-09-26 1977-03-29 Mitsubishi Metal Corp Casting apparatus for narrow lever like articles
JPS5240429A (en) * 1975-09-26 1977-03-29 Mitsubishi Metal Corp Casting method of narrow lever like articles
US4458741A (en) * 1978-02-03 1984-07-10 Cabot Corporation Method of aspiration casting

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR2550483A1 (en) * 1983-08-09 1985-02-15 Hauni Werke Koerber & Co Kg METHOD AND DEVICE FOR SEPARATING WORKPIECES FROM CLAMPING BLOCKS COMING FROM CAST
GB2148755A (en) * 1983-08-09 1985-06-05 Hauni Werke Koerber & Co Kg Method and apparatus for separating cast or extruded support blocks from workpieces
US4827583A (en) * 1984-10-27 1989-05-09 Korber Ag Apparatus for breaking up cast fixtures

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
BR7904134A (en) 1980-03-18
AU4805679A (en) 1980-01-10
DE2923252A1 (en) 1980-01-17
GB2024677B (en) 1982-09-15
FR2430283A1 (en) 1980-02-01
JPS5510397A (en) 1980-01-24

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PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee