Can the selection of runners impact casting cleaning?
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Above: Custom-cut CerraBreakers pre-placed in
a pattern for an aluminum casting, using No-Bake
molding. Below: the resulting flat cleavage plane from
a CerraBreaker used in a ductile iron application. The
runner was “knocked away” using only a shop hammer. |
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While the drive to reduce operating costs may seem like a never-ending road for metalcasting operations, an organization’s ability to convert those cost-efficiencies into powerful and immediate market leverage is undeniably a deciding factor in their long-term survival. What makes this formidable task even more challenging is the acceptable “cost” of cost reductions.
Significant capital investment in new production equipment yields true savings only after the “payback” period is complete. At the same time, should a more attractive solution arise later it may be difficult for a customer to change again. Technical flexibility is an advantage few organizations actively manage well, but those who do expose themselves to the least risk.
Cleaning room or casting “finishing” operations have long been target areas for increased efficiency and cost-reduction efforts, and can represent a significant portion of total production cost. Removing runner systems and risers from a finished casting typically requires foundry personnel to use cutting saws, abrasive wheels, or cutting torches. Although effective, these techniques also expose workers to risk of injury from repetitive vibration, high noise levels, heavy lifting, and respiratory dust.
While some of the largest foundries (mostly captive OEM) have the financial ability to purchase one or more automated robotic systems to handle finishing operations, most medium-sized and smaller metalcasters continue to search for less costly options simply to remain competitive. Not surprisingly, innovative foundries that find ways to squeeze costs or make their cleaning operations more efficient tend to protect their discoveries, particularly when those methods do not require large capital expenditures and can be adopted easily.
Internal best practices
One of the most surprising, yet effective techniques that has been
a “back-room best practice” for many foundries is using standard
silica-mesh fabric in runner systems and in the base of riser sleeves
to create “cleavage planes” that typically come apart during vibratory
shakeout, or with the minor impact of a shop hammer. For anyone
watching cleaning room personnel spend hours cutting small castings
from runner trees, or witnessing a hydraulic ram violently bash
risers from large castings, the value of “low-impact” de-gating is no
mystery. An additional benefit of using standard silica-mesh material
as a de-gating aid is that it acts as a molten metal filter wherever it’s
placed. While it’s not uncommon for foundries to use ceramic foam
filters placed directly in runner systems or in the bottom of riser
sleeves for additional filtration, ceramic foam filters do nothing to
make runner segmentation or riser-removal any easier.
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No “one-size fits all”
Of course, there are certain drawbacks and limitations to using
standard silica-mesh cloth that foundrymen should consider for their
specific application. These considerations include:
Molten metal temperature maximum of approximately 2,800°F/1,534°C The application alloy pouring temperature should not exceed the recommended level as the mesh material can quickly “break-through”. Therefore, casting stainless steel or other hightemperature alloy applications must be monitored carefully to avoid temperature variations.
Incompatibility with aluminum and pure copper Typically, standard silica-mesh cloth is treated with a thermal setting phenolic resin and pre-shrunk to create the rigidity necessary to hold the specific shapes for foundry applications. This treatment, although necessary, also precludes it from being used with pure copper because the resin chemicals are attacked by the oxides and slag generated by melted copper and lead to a rapid structural failure, and the mesh breaks through. A different problem can occur with aluminum alloys as standard silica-mesh material will “off-gas” as the molten aluminum passes through it, often causing porosity-related defects.
Deflection or “flexing” of material into casting body With regard to keeping the molten alloy pouring temperature below maximum, standard silica-mesh fabric typically deflects or “flexes” (but does not break) in the direction of alloy flow. This deflection is usually an acceptable drawback, as the material remains intact as a filter and provides the cleavage plane necessary for easier runner segmentation later. However, when placed in the bottom of a riser sleeve, the silica mesh can deflect downward into the body of the casting or upward into the riser sleeve, and when “knocked off” will create a surface problem that must be machined away later. The best result is a flat cleavage plane that requires no additional re-work.
Closing the gaps
Considering the wide-ranging benefits that could be realized in
finishing/cleaning room operation by addressing the problems of
standard silica-mesh fabric, Comanche Technologies has developed
two new products the CerraBreaker® and the RiserBreaker®
that leverage the technical strengths of CerraFlex®, a ceramiccoated,
high-strength silica mesh filter material. Each CerraBreaker
is a custom-cut piece of CerraFlex that’s placed directly in the runner
system where the mold designer wants break-points. Because each
CerraBreaker is also a molten metal filter, designers often place additional
units earlier in the flow stream to capture slag and inclusions
directly in the runner network, as well as directly at the contact area
for each casting.
A RiserBreaker is a CerraBreaker that has been “framed” within a core-sand breaker core, attached to the base of any variety of risersleeve. This frame design is critical to ensure there is no deflection of the CerraFlex material in either direction of molten metal flow, while the breaker-core itself creates a smaller contact area that makes “knock-off” even easier. Each RiserBreaker-Sleeve unit is customcalculated according to customer provided, application-specific data to ensure optimal performance.
Operational cost savings
So the larger (and easily the most important) question for every
foundry should be “how much will we save by using CerraBreakers
or RiserBreakers in our finishing operations?” The honest answer is
“it will depend …,” because the scale of cleaning or finishing room
operations varies significantly from one foundry to another based
on average size of castings produced, alloys cast, etc. Moreover, as
these techniques are used across the metalcasting process spectrum
(green sand, no-bake, permanent mold, investment casting, etc.),
average cost-savings will vary as well. Ultimately, this question can
be answered by your operations team, as they should be driving the
cost-saving, efficiency-finding initiatives. But, the workers doing the
grinding and sawing will thank you.
Jason Hitchings is the general manager of Comanche Technologies. The author gratefully acknowledges the previous research published as “Use Fabric, Breaker Cores to Cut Ductile Iron Finishing Cost,” (Modern Casting, 1999) as a reference for this article. Contact him at JHitchings@comanchetechnologies.com, or visit www.comanchetechnologies.com.



