In order that the invention may be more fully understood there will now be described, by way of example only, preferred embodiments and other elements of the invention with reference to the accompanying drawings where:
a) and 17(b) illustrate the ejector pin used in an embodiment of the invention; and
Referring to
Molten metal is introduced to the cavity 20 by means of a high pressure injection system wherein metal is fed through a pour hole 22 into a shot sleeve 24 and a piston 26 on a plunger 28 first closes the pour hole 22 and then, in the same stroke, forces the desired amount of molten metal from the shot sleeve 24 through a runner 30 into the cavity 20. At the opposite end of the cavity a vent hole 32 allows gases and excess metal to escape the cavity.
Before molten metal is introduced to the cavity 20, the air in the cavity is evacuated through the vent hole 32 by means of a vacuum supply in a tank 34 connected to the vent hole 32 by way of a vacuum line 37 containing a solenoid actuated isolating valve 36 and a vacuum valve 38 of one of the types discussed earlier in this specification. For simple vacuum systems the effective evacuating time is only a few seconds and is set by the travel time of the plunger 28 from covering the pour hole to the change-over position.
The vent assembly according to one embodiment of the invention is shown in
As best shown in
The first main face plate 150 has an L-shaped frame portion 155 and a tapered engagement portion 157. The frame portion 155 has parallel opposed faces 159 and 160 (face 160 being hidden from view in the Figures) by which the plate 150 mates with corresponding parallel faces on neighbouring portion 200 and plate 100 respectively. The extending member portion 157 has a plurality of adjoining chill faces. In the embodiment shown, the extending member is wedge shaped, having a pair of wedge main faces 162 and 163 (face 163 being hidden from view in the Figures) aligned to each other at a taper angle 164 and 165 of about 10° (identified on
Each wedge main face 162 and 163 has top face portion 172 and 173 respectively, which is flat, and a lower face portion 174 and 175 respectively which carries corrugations 176 having a serrated form (saw tooth cross section) on its surface. Each corrugation 176 extends along its respective face 162 and 163 from the thin end 166 to the thick end 168.
The end face 170 also carries horizontally extending corrugations 184 which each join corresponding corrugations on faces 162 and 163 to create an array of continuous ribs each rib extending across one main face 162, then across the end face 170, then across the other main face 163.
One leg of the L-shaped frame portion 155 forms a substantial fastening portion 180 extending upwards in the illustrations. The other, smaller, leg forms a base portion 182 of the frame portion and extends only halfway along the engagement portion 157.
The first end plate main portion 50 is similar to the first main face plate 150 except that it has an angled and corrugated face 62 on only one side while its opposite face 63 is flat and parallel to faces 159 and 160.
The first narrow face plate 100 has an L-shaped frame portion 105 like the frame portion 155 of plate 150 but, instead of having a tapered engagement portion like 20 portion 157 of plate 150, the first narrow face plate 100 has an end face 136 carrying serrated ripples like those of face 170 of the first main face plate 150.
The second end plate mating portion 200 is similar to the first narrow face plate 100 except that it carries no corrugations and the holes 202 and 203 are recessed to accommodate bolt heads (not shown).
The first end plate main portion 50, the first narrow face plate 100, the first main face plate 150 and the second end plate mating portion 200 are firmly bolted together in the configuration shown in
As best shown in
Two threaded holes 188 and 189 in the top face 154 of plate 150 lead to a gallery for flow of temperature control fluid within the first main face plate 150 and the holes 188 and 189 provide an inlet and outlet respectively for the temperature control fluid. Similar pairs of holes 338, 339, 88, 89, 438 and 439 are provided in plate 300 and portions 50 and 400 respectively. A hole 341, blanked off at its outer end, provides gallery communication between holes 338 and 339. A corresponding blanked-off hole 441 provides communication between temperature control fluid holes 438 and 439, and corresponding holes (not shown) are also provided to link holes 88 and 89 and holes 188 and 189 to form respective temperature control fluid flow galleries.
The block structures 450 and 452 mate together to create a chill vent body 453 in which the extending member portion 307 of the second main face plate 300 is a wedge-shaped member engaged with a wedge-shaped recess 477 formed by opposed faces 62, 136 and 163, Similarly, the extending member portion 157 of the first main face plate 150 is a wedge-shaped member engaged with a wedge-shaped recess formed by opposed faces of plates 300 and 350 and portion 400.
The first block structure 450 is securely fastened to the moving half die of the HPDC apparatus by way of bolts (not shown) extending through holes 142 and 192 in the frame portion 105 and the frame portion 155 respectively. Similarly the second block structure 452 is securely fastened to the fixed half die of the HPDC apparatus by way of bolts (not shown) extending through holes 342 and 392 in the second main face plate 300 and the second narrow face plate 350 respectively. Thus in use, the block structures 450 and 452 separate from each other in the same direction as the die halves separate.
Thus when engaged, the chill faces 62, 136, 163, 162, 170 of the first block structure define one wall of a continuous vent chamber 460. Each of the chill faces 62, 136, 163, 162, 170 has a corresponding chill face on the second block structure to define the opposed wall of the vent chamber. The chill faces of the corresponding modules or face plates are equidistantly spaced over the height of the chill face for that section of the vent chamber. In fact, if the corrugations are ignored, the faces are planar and the chill faces of corresponding modules in a section of the vent chamber are substantially parallel. Hence the width of the vent chamber is substantially the same along its length. As each of the chill faces of the first block structure are at an angle to an adjoining chill face, the vent chamber has a number of interconnected non aligned vent sections extending the length thereof. This orientation ensures that the forces normal to the chill faces exerted by the molten metal, do not all act in the same direction and act against one another to some extent. In fact, components of these normal forces over the length of the vent chamber are in opposite directions and hence act against one and do not act to separate the chill blocks.
While the opposed flat surfaces make a sealing contact when the structures are pressed together, there is a gap between all of the opposed rippled surfaces to provide a convoluted chamber 460 for capture and solidification of metal exiting the die cavity 20.
Holes 140 (
Ejector pins 454 (
A threaded hole 193 is provided in the top face 154 of plate 150, and a threaded hole 343 is provided in the top face 304 of plate 300, whereby lifting means may be attached to facilitate lifting of the chill vent body 453.
The chill vent body assembly 453 (
In use air is evacuated from the vent chamber 460 through the holes 140 and 390 after the two structures are pressed together in engaged contact. The holes 140 and 390 are sufficiently distant from the vent inlet 464 for all the molten metal entering the chamber 460 to solidify before the level of metal reaches the holes 140 and 390.
The formation 502 shown in
Panels 520 and 540 lie parallel to the runner 566 while the panels 510, 530 and 550 are angled at about 95° to panels 520 and 540. The array 504 of panels is thus arranged in an S-shape. Panels 510, 530 and 550 are aligned at an angle of about 5° to the direction (marked X-X on
The panels 510, 520, 530, 540 and 550 would be formed by filling of the convoluted gap between opposed rippled surfaces on the block structures 450 and 452. For example panel 530 would be formed by filling of the gap between faces 163 and 312 on the first main face plate 150 and the second main face plate 300 respectively.
The formation 602 shown in
Surface coatings may be applied to the corrugated surfaces in order to improve their performance. Suitably a titanium nitride coating may be provided to prevent metal and other material sticking to the corrugated surfaces. It can also manipulate thermal transfer between the chill blocks and solidifying metal and is expected to increase the life of the chill face surface. Additionally the roughness of the corrugated surfaces may be enhanced in order to improve their performance.
It has been found from tests that when this vent assembly is connected to a vacuum system with a vacuum tank 34 and solenoid valve 36, at least the same or even better evacuation efficiency than a conventional vacuum valve can be achieved. This is because:
Another advantage of the above-described vent is that the geometry leads to all the metal which solidifies in the vent being joined together enabling easier and more reliable ejection with less problems from separate pieces stuck in the vent.
Since the flow passage is shut off by the solidified metal, there is no need for any additional moving parts to act as a mechanical vacuum valve. Thus the present invention is a more robust device which is particularly advantageous because such mechanical vacuum valves are difficult to maintain in the HPDC process.
This invention thus has advantages over both the conventional chill vent and the vacuum valves currently used in the die casting industry.
A device in accordance with the first embodiment was trialled in a production machine of a die casting plant. The part was an aluminium pump cover, which has a complicated geometry shape. The part was usually produced with a commercial vacuum system, by which the vacuum valve is covered by U.S. Pat. No. 5,488,985 and was regarded as the commercially best on the market. The commercial valve fails at least once a day in this particular casting machine. The valve in accordance with the first embodiment was tested in the machine and consistently ran for two days without failure. This proved the robustness of the invented device. The casting quality produced in the trial has been checked. It has achieved the same quality as that from the normal production. Sensors were installed in the machine to monitor the performance of the invented device. The same level of vacuum in the die cavity was achieved in the trial as when using the commercial valve.
A further embodiment of the invention is shown in
The main face plate 760 is located towards the centre of the inserts. It is tapered in the manner of the tapered extending member portion 157 described above. Wedge faces 762 and 764 on respective obverse sides of the insert 760 each carry an array of corrugations 768. The end face 766 is also provided with corrugations thereon and in this respect is substantially the same as the tapered extending member portion 157 of the first embodiment.
The endplate 720 has an angled corrugated face 724 on one main face and a flat main face 722 on the obverse side. Its end face does not have corrugations thereon. The flat main face bears snugly against an end wall 713 of the case 712 and the corrugated face 724 is angled at about 5° to the flat main face 722.
The centre spacer 740 is angled on its top face 742 to engage with a mating block.
The end spacer 780 has a flat face on its side bearing against the end wall 714 of the box, and is angled on its top face 782 to engage with downwardly facing face 728 on a mating block.
When two blocks 710 are mated together for use, angled faces 724, 762, 764 and end faces 766 and 726 form a continuous vent chamber.
The case 712 provides a flat shut off face when the two blocks are brought together, while the first embodiment of this invention as described above relies on three angled faces (172, 173 etc) and four flat faces to shut off, which is very difficult from engineering point of view. The case is further provided with seal grooves 730, 732 extending around the end walls 714, 715 and top section 717. The grooves are made with an undercut. Rubber strips (not shown) are embedded into the groove. The rubber in the groove 730 perfectly seals the gap when the two blocks are pressed together. The rubber strip in the groove 732 seals the air leak between the bolted inserts (720, 740, 760 and 780) and the case 710. The bore holes 735 enable temperature control fluid pipes (not shown) threaded to the holes 88, 89 and 188, 189 as described above to pass through the case 710 to connect to the temperature control fluid source.
A significant benefit of using a case 712 to contain the components is that it can serve to reduce air leakage into the chamber 460 when vacuum is applied.
During use, dust (a mixture of lubricant and metal flash) is generated in the casting process and sticks to the corrugated surface of the chill faces. This build up of dust over time blocks the passage of gas flow and thus decreases venturing efficiency. Air blow is integrated into the top section 717 of the case 712. The gas blow comprises of the nozzle holes 736, the distribution chamber (hidden from the surface of the drawing and its end is shown by the two small holes at the rear of 717 in
In the embodiment shown in
Whilst the above description includes the preferred embodiments of the invention, it is to be understood that many variations, alterations, modifications and/or additions may be introduced into the constructions and arrangements of parts previously described without departing from the essential features or the spirit or ambit of the invention.
For example, although the embodiments described above have the chill vent connected to a vacuum, the use of a vacuum is not essential. The chill vent may be used without a vacuum connection and testing has shown that in such a configuration the chill vent is 3 to 4 times more efficient than a conventional chill vent.
Also, the embodiments described have a taper angle 164 and 165 of about 10° but the exact angle is not particularly important providing the block structures 450 and 452 fit together neatly and the draft angle is sufficient to reliably achieve ejection of the formation 502. The wedge shape is not even limited to a sharp angle. Furthermore angles 164 and 165 could be different to each other.
The end faces 136 and 186 are described as having corrugations covering them completely. However these faces may carry corrugations on only some or even none of their surfaces.
The corrugated end faces 136 and 186 have been described as substantially planar, and joining the wedge main faces (eg. faces 162 and 163) at respective edges 194 and 195. Alternatively the end faces (such as end face 186) may be curved, and may be cured so far that they blend into the main faces (eg. faces 162 and 163) without or with minimal edges 194 and 195.
The corrugations may be any convenient shape but an abrupt zigzag formation has been found to be particularly suitable.
The blocks 450, 452 and 710 described all have many components requiring assembly. The invention envisages those blocks (or their equivalents) being made as a single unitary item.
The present invention may act as a valve when vacuum is applied or may act as a vent when no vacuum is applied, even for the same configuration.
Some embodiments of the invention do not have a gap between the wedge end face and the slot end face so that in the solidification chamber corresponding to chamber 460 no panel portions are produced which are parallel to the runner 666.
It will be also understood that where the word “comprise”, and variations such as “comprises” and “comprising”, are used in this specification, unless the context requires otherwise such use is intended to imply the inclusion of a stated feature or features but is not to be taken as excluding the presence of other feature or features.
The reference to any prior art in this specification is not, and should not be taken as, an acknowledgment or any form of suggestion that such prior art forms part of the common general knowledge in Australia.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2003905353 | Oct 2003 | AU | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/AU04/01266 | 9/17/2004 | WO | 00 | 3/2/2007 |