US2771649A - Remote strike off - Google Patents

Remote strike off Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2771649A
US2771649A US373810A US37381053A US2771649A US 2771649 A US2771649 A US 2771649A US 373810 A US373810 A US 373810A US 37381053 A US37381053 A US 37381053A US 2771649 A US2771649 A US 2771649A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
pattern
sand
metal
molds
mold
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.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US373810A
Inventor
Julius M Bleuenstein
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Ford Motor Co
Original Assignee
Ford Motor Co
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 Ford Motor Co filed Critical Ford Motor Co
Priority to US373810A priority Critical patent/US2771649A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2771649A publication Critical patent/US2771649A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B22CASTING; POWDER METALLURGY
    • B22CFOUNDRY MOULDING
    • B22C19/00Components or accessories for moulding machines
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B22CASTING; POWDER METALLURGY
    • B22CFOUNDRY MOULDING
    • B22C11/00Moulding machines characterised by the relative arrangement of the parts of same
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B22CASTING; POWDER METALLURGY
    • B22CFOUNDRY MOULDING
    • B22C23/00Tools; Devices not mentioned before for moulding

Definitions

  • each completed mold In the preparation of stack molds two cornplementary mold halves are superimposed upon each other to produce a completed mold, each completed mold usually being provided with cavities to form a large number of individual pieces. These assembled mold pairs are then stacked vertically and clamped into position. While so stacked, the entire assemblage is poured simultaneously through suitable risers.
  • a metal pattern was provided containing positive patterns of the part to be produced. This pattern was then struck oit level, with the depth or" the sand being kept at a minimum considering the thickness ot the castings.
  • the molds were, of course, heat cured in this metal pattern box. Since the faces of the mold to be placed adjacent each other in assembling the complementary pairs were produced and cured against a finished pattern, no difculty was experienced in producing a metal-tight seal between the complementary mold halves. Leakage was no problem as long as only a single pair of mold halves was employed.
  • Figure l is a planned view of a of mold halves.
  • Figure 2 is a cross section of Figure l along the line 2 2 showing the pattern filled with sand and struck ott but not cured, and
  • Figure 3 shows the cured mold in place in the metal pattern.
  • the pattern is denominated generally as 10.
  • This pattern comprises a planar base 1li surrounded by side walls l2 secured to base ll upon which is secured the replicas i3 on the castings to be produced.
  • pattern it? is provided with a central gate i4 and four corner risers lo'. Attention is invited to the tact that each of the risers is provided with a substantial collar ot metal.
  • ln the case pattern for production Patented Nov. 27, 1956 of central risers l5, 'this collar has been denominated 16.
  • Such a stack may be produced with no pasting between adjacent molds or at best only a minimum of pasting and reliance placed upon the comparatively unshrunken collars of sand surrounding each metal passage to prevent the undesired lateral flow of metal during pouring.
  • This structure also localizes upon the risers any metal leakage that does occur where it is relatively harmless.
  • the process of producing a molding element comprising providing a metal pattern with a planar sand receiving base, replicas of the article to be produced on the base, a raised wall surrounding the base, and holes in the base to provide gates and risers, each of said holes being surrounded by a boss or mass of metal elevated from the base a distance approximately equal to the height of the wall, heaping the pattern with a heat settable mixture of sand and a resin, striking ott the pattern promptly and before excessive setting of the mixture has taken place, said strike ot operation being conducted so as to leave a thin layer of sand over the wall and bosses, and finally applying heat to cure the mixture in the pattern and cause dilerential shrinkage of the mixture.
  • the process for producing a stack mold for the reception of molten metal comprising providing a metal pattern with a planar sand receiving base, replicas of the articles to be produced on the base, a raised wall surrounding the base, and holes in the base to provide gates and risers, each of said holes being surrounded by a boss or mass of metal elevated from the plane of the base a distance approximately equal to the height of the wall, heaping the pattern with a heat settable mixture of sand and resin, striking oli the pattern promptly and before excessive setting of the mixture has taken place, said strike olf operation being conducted so as to leave a thin layer of sand over the wall and bosses, applying heat to cure the mixture in the pattern and cause differential shrinkage of the mixture, removing the molds so produced from the pattern and stacking a plurality of molds so produced to complete a stack mold.

Description

Nov. 27, 1956 J. M. BLEUENSTEIN 2,771,649
REMOTE STRIKE OFF Filed Aug. 12, 195s .VIII
ill)
J M. BL 50E/v5 TE//v IN V EN TOR.
ArroRA/E ys 2,771,649 REMTE STltilE @EF Julius M. Bleuenstein, Detroit, Mich., assigner to Ford Motor Company, Dearborn, Mich, a corporation of Delaware Application August l2, i953, Serial No. 37.3,St 2 Claims. (Cl. Z22-i935) This invention relates to the founding art and more specifically to that portion of the foundi Cg art appertaining to the high volume production of relatively small castings. This invention also relates to, and is improvement upon, the well known shell mol In the production of larve numbers ci castings the use of stack molds is a well known procedure. In the preparation of stack molds two cornplementary mold halves are superimposed upon each other to produce a completed mold, each completed mold usually being provided with cavities to form a large number of individual pieces. These assembled mold pairs are then stacked vertically and clamped into position. While so stacked, the entire assemblage is poured simultaneously through suitable risers.
When the shell molding procedure was adapted to stack molding, a metal pattern was provided containing positive patterns of the part to be produced. This pattern was then struck oit level, with the depth or" the sand being kept at a minimum considering the thickness ot the castings. The molds were, of course, heat cured in this metal pattern box. Since the faces of the mold to be placed adjacent each other in assembling the complementary pairs were produced and cured against a finished pattern, no difculty was experienced in producing a metal-tight seal between the complementary mold halves. Leakage was no problem as long as only a single pair of mold halves was employed. When it was attempted to stack these completed molds, diiculty was encountered with leakage of metal between the adjacent molds due to the unevenness produced in the struck ed surface due to the differential shrinkage of the sand during curing. In an attempt to alleviate this diiculty, the art resorted to an operation necessitating the placing of the nished surface of a mold half upon a llat surface and a grinding operation on the opposite surface in an attempt to produce metal-tight assembly. However, due to the fact that stresses are set up in the sand mixture during curing, the grinding operation caused Warpage due to the release of these stresses and simply succeeded in transferring undesirable leakage and dash from the risers intermediate the individual molds to the castings themselves.
The instant invention has been developed to avoid this ditlculty and takes advantage of the fact that the amount of shrinkage of the sand mixture during curing is directly proportional to the thickness of the sand layers. This invention may best be explained by reference to the drawings in which:
Figure l is a planned view of a of mold halves.
Figure 2 is a cross section of Figure l along the line 2 2 showing the pattern filled with sand and struck ott but not cured, and
Figure 3 shows the cured mold in place in the metal pattern.
Referring to Figure l the pattern is denominated generally as 10. This pattern comprises a planar base 1li surrounded by side walls l2 secured to base ll upon which is secured the replicas i3 on the castings to be produced. lt will be noted that pattern it? is provided with a central gate i4 and four corner risers lo'. Attention is invited to the tact that each of the risers is provided with a substantial collar ot metal. ln the case pattern for production Patented Nov. 27, 1956 of central risers l5, 'this collar has been denominated 16.
ln operation the sand mixture is heaped upon pattern it? and struck oit as shown in Figure 2. T his is accomplished by strike ott bar 17. Particular attention is invited to the fact that strike ott bar l? does not Contact pattern ltr? but clears pattern itl by a substantial amount. This clearance is indicated by the letter C in Figures 2 3. it will be observed that wall l2 of pattern 10 is equal in height to the highest portion of each of the individual. casting clusters. ln the case of the casting clusters, this high point is advisedly that portion ot' the pattern surrounding the riser. A similar consideration applies to central riser ld.
When this mold is struck ott and cured, the structure depicted in Figure 3 is obtained. ln Figure 3 the shrinkage ot` the sand on curing has been exaggerated in the interest of clarity. This invention provides a minimum sand thickness over wall 12 and around each of the gates and risers. This minimum thickness of sand heats and cures more rapidly than the adjacent thicker layers and hence has a lesser amount of shrinkage. Thus, when a plurality of completed molds are produced by assembling the half molds formed in patterns lil in pairs and these assembled pairs are stacked, the actual contact by the adjacent pairs will be limited to the area which was directly over the walls l2 and which surrounded the risers id and gates l5. Such a stack may be produced with no pasting between adjacent molds or at best only a minimum of pasting and reliance placed upon the comparatively unshrunken collars of sand surrounding each metal passage to prevent the undesired lateral flow of metal during pouring. This structure also localizes upon the risers any metal leakage that does occur where it is relatively harmless.
I claim as my invention:
1. The process of producing a molding element comprising providing a metal pattern with a planar sand receiving base, replicas of the article to be produced on the base, a raised wall surrounding the base, and holes in the base to provide gates and risers, each of said holes being surrounded by a boss or mass of metal elevated from the base a distance approximately equal to the height of the wall, heaping the pattern with a heat settable mixture of sand and a resin, striking ott the pattern promptly and before excessive setting of the mixture has taken place, said strike ot operation being conducted so as to leave a thin layer of sand over the wall and bosses, and finally applying heat to cure the mixture in the pattern and cause dilerential shrinkage of the mixture.
2. The process for producing a stack mold for the reception of molten metal comprising providing a metal pattern with a planar sand receiving base, replicas of the articles to be produced on the base, a raised wall surrounding the base, and holes in the base to provide gates and risers, each of said holes being surrounded by a boss or mass of metal elevated from the plane of the base a distance approximately equal to the height of the wall, heaping the pattern with a heat settable mixture of sand and resin, striking oli the pattern promptly and before excessive setting of the mixture has taken place, said strike olf operation being conducted so as to leave a thin layer of sand over the wall and bosses, applying heat to cure the mixture in the pattern and cause differential shrinkage of the mixture, removing the molds so produced from the pattern and stacking a plurality of molds so produced to complete a stack mold.
Ensign et al. Oct. 13, 1953 OTHER REFERENCES American Foundryman, August 1952, pages 42-46.
US373810A 1953-08-12 1953-08-12 Remote strike off Expired - Lifetime US2771649A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US373810A US2771649A (en) 1953-08-12 1953-08-12 Remote strike off

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US373810A US2771649A (en) 1953-08-12 1953-08-12 Remote strike off

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2771649A true US2771649A (en) 1956-11-27

Family

ID=23473969

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US373810A Expired - Lifetime US2771649A (en) 1953-08-12 1953-08-12 Remote strike off

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2771649A (en)

Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2654925A (en) * 1950-06-23 1953-10-13 Ford Motor Co Precision casting process

Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2654925A (en) * 1950-06-23 1953-10-13 Ford Motor Co Precision casting process

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3216074A (en) Method for making shaped foundry articles
US20140034263A1 (en) Freight car yoke molding apparatus and method
CN107745087B (en) Sand core and its cold-box core shooting universal mold and manufacturing method
US20130168035A1 (en) Method and system for manufacturing railcar coupler locks
US2654925A (en) Precision casting process
US2771649A (en) Remote strike off
US2720687A (en) Method of making molds or cores utilizing a backup cover
US2791811A (en) Shell mold and apparatus for producing it
US2807845A (en) Shell mold and method of making same
US2789331A (en) Method and apparatus for making molds useful in casting
US1401577A (en) Art of molding
US3472310A (en) Shell mold and process for shell molding
US2303092A (en) Method of preparing metal molds
US1335509A (en) Method of making molds for finished castings
US2947046A (en) Method of making plastic laminated core boxes and patterns
US3278995A (en) Pattern for simultaneously forming an integral mould and core
US3472306A (en) Process for forming an arcuate metal punch plate
US2832112A (en) Shell mold casting and method
US8448691B1 (en) Bearing housing molding apparatus and method
GB1442781A (en) Apparatus for moulding ceramic cores and wax or plastic patterns
US2991521A (en) Method of manufacturing hollow piston cores
GB732118A (en) Method of producing resin bonded moulds and cores, moulds and cores so formed, methods of casting using these, and castings made thereby
US3137902A (en) Apparatus for forming semi-permanent casting moulds
US910166A (en) Process for making pattern and stripping plates.
US898728A (en) Method of making molders' patterns.