1. Panimula
Sand casting stands as one of the oldest and most versatile metal-forming processes.
By forcing molten metal into a sand-based mold, foundries produce everything from simple brackets to complex turbine housings.
Its enduring relevance stems from unmatched adaptability: it handles part sizes ranging from grams to over 100 tons, works with nearly all casting alloys, and balances cost efficiency with design freedom.
This article explores its mechanics, materyal na agham, mga aplikasyon, and competitive landscape, offering a technical deep dive for engineers and manufacturers.
2. What Is Sand Casting?
Sa core nito, sand casting relies on a pattern—an exact replica of the final part—placed inside a two-part mold comprising the cope (top half) at drag (bottom half).
Once the pattern sits in the flask, foundry sand mixed with binders (luwad, resin, or chemical hardeners) surrounds it.

After the sand hardens, removing the pattern leaves a cavity ready for metal.
Depende sa application, foundries employ several mold types:
- Berdeng Buhangin: A mixture of silica sand, luwad (typically bentonite), and water. Green sand molds account for over 70% of global casting volume due to their low cost and reusability.
- Chemically Bonded Sand: Uses resins or phenolic binders to create molds with superior dimensional accuracy at ibabaw tapusin.
- Walang Pagluluto (Air-Set) Buhangin: A two-component system that cures at room temperature, ideal for large or complex patterns.
Key Materials:
- Silica Sand (SiO₂): Constitutes 85–95% of mold sand, valued for its high melting point (1,713°C) and granular structure that traps air for permeability.
- Binders: Organic (bentonite for green sand, phenolic for no-bake) or inorganic (sosa silicate) to bind sand grains; their choice impacts mold strength, reusability, at epekto sa kapaligiran.
- Mga additives: Carbon (reduces metal penetration), sawdust (improves permeability), and defoamers (minimizes gas entrapment).
3. Types of Sand Casting
Sand casting isn’t just one single process—it comes in several “flavors,” each tailored to different production volumes, metal types, pagiging kumplikado, and desired surface finish.

The main categories are:
Paghahagis ng Berdeng Buhangin
- Mold Material: A mixture of silica sand, luwad (bentonite), tubig, and sometimes additives (e.g. sea coal).
- Mga Katangian:
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- Mold is “green” (i.e. contains moisture) and reusable.
- Quick turnaround and very cost-effective for low-to-medium production runs.
- Fair surface finish (Ra ≈ 200–400 µin).
- Typical Uses: Mga bahagi ng sasakyan (mga bloke ng engine, mga ulo ng silindro), agricultural components, Mga pabahay ng bomba.
Dry Sand Casting
- Mold Material: Green-sand mold that is subsequently baked or air-dried to remove moisture.
- Mga Katangian:
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- Improved dimensional accuracy and surface finish over green sand (Ra ≈ 100–200 µin).
- Better moisture control reduces gas defects.
- Longer mold preparation time; best for medium runs.
- Typical Uses: Mga bakal na bakal, hindi kinakalawang na asero, larger castings requiring tighter tolerances.
Chemically Bonded (Walang Pagluluto & Cold-Box) buhangin paghahagis
- Walang Pagluluto (Air-Set):
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- Binder (phenolic, furan or sodium silicate + catalyst) mixed at room temperature.
- Molds cure over minutes to hours—no heating required.
- Cold-Box (Gas-Cured):
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- Resin-coated sand packed into a metal flask and “cured” by passing an amine gas.
- Fast cure (mga segundo), excellent mold strength and fine detail.
- Mga Katangian:
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- Very good surface finish (Ra ≈ 50–100 µin).
- High-dimensional accuracy.
- Binder costs higher; molds are not reusable.
- Typical Uses: Mga bahagi ng aerospace, hydraulic parts, instrument housings.
Coated Sand Casting
- Proseso: Sand grains are coated with a thin resin layer, pagbuo ng isang malakas na, heat-resistant mold.
- Mga Tampok: Napakahusay na kalidad ng ibabaw, mataas na lakas, minimal na pagbaluktot.
- Mga Aplikasyon: Mga Valve, Mga Casing ng Bomba, and small to medium-sized parts requiring tight tolerances.
Pagmomolde ng Shell
- Mold Material: Fine silica sand coated with a thermosetting resin to form a thin “shell.”
- Proseso: Heated pattern creates a 3–10 mm thick shell; two halves are then joined.
- Mga Katangian:
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- Superior surface finish (Ra ≈ 25–75 µin).
- Excellent dimensional accuracy.
- Higher tooling and resin costs—best for high-volume runs.
- Typical Uses: High-precision automotive gears, mga bloke ng engine, Mga Impeller ng Bomba.
Vacuum (V-Process) buhangin paghahagis
- Mold Material: Unbonded dry silica sand contained in an airtight flask; vacuum draws the sand tightly against the pattern.
- Mga Katangian:
-
- No chemical binder → virtually no gas defects.
- Magandang pagtatapos sa ibabaw (Ra ≈ 75–150 µin).
- Mold breakdown easy (just release vacuum).
- Equipment investment is higher; suited for medium-to-high volume.
- Typical Uses: Aluminum and copper alloy castings for aerospace, pagtatanggol, high-quality industrial parts.
4. Step-by-Step Process of Sand Casting

Pattern Design & Pagpili ng Materyal:
Engineers choose patterns based on part complexity and production volume: wooden patterns for prototypes, metal patterns for high-volume runs.
Digital tools like 3D scanning ensure precision, while CAD software accounts for shrinkage (hal., 1.5% para sa aluminum, 2% para sa bakal).
Mold and Core Making Techniques
After the pattern setup, technicians pack sand around it in the cope and drag.
For internal features, they create cores—sand shapes bonded separately and placed within the mold. Core print design ensures correct positioning and support.
Assembly: Mga Tip sa Pag-install, Mga Riser, & Vents:
The mold halves are joined, na may isang gating system (sprue, runner, mga gate) designed to control metal flow and a Tumaas (reservoir of molten metal) to compensate for shrinkage.
Vents ensure gas escape, preventing porosity. Modern foundries use computational fluid dynamics (CFD) to optimize these systems, reducing waste by 15–20%.
Natutunaw na & Pagbubuhos ng:
Metals like gray iron (melting point 1,150°C), aluminyo (660°C), or stainless steel (1,400°C) are heated 50–100°C above their melting point in furnaces (cupolas for iron, induction furnaces for non-ferrous metals).
Pouring speed and turbulence are critical: too fast risks oxide inclusions; too slow causes incomplete filling.
Paglamig, Shakeout, & Sand Reclamation:
Pagkatapos ng solidification (minutes for small parts, hours for large castings), the mold is broken (shakeout), and the part is separated.
Sand is recycled: modern facilities reclaim 90–95% of sand via screening and magnetic separation, cutting material costs by 30%.
5. Common Metals and Alloys for Sand Casting
Sand casting accommodates a remarkably broad spectrum of engineering alloys.
Foundries select metals based on strength, paglaban sa kaagnasan, thermal katatagan, at gastos.

Talahanayan: The common metals and alloys used in sand casting
| Alloy Category | Grade / Specification | Key Composition | Lakas ng Paghatak | Mga Pangunahing Katangian | Mga Karaniwang Aplikasyon |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| kulay abo na bakal | ASTM A48 Class 20–60 | 2.5–4.0 % C, 1.0–3.0 % Si Si | 200–400 MPa | Excellent vibration damping; mababang gastos; magandang machinability | Mga bloke ng engine, Mga pabahay ng bomba, Mga base ng makina |
| Ductile Iron | ASTM A536 Grades 60–40–18 to 105–70–03 | 3.0–4.0 % C, 1.8–2.8 % Si Si, Mg or Ce spheroidizer | 400–700 MPa | Mataas na lakas & tigas na tigas; superior fatigue resistance | Steering knuckles, mga crankshaft, heavy-duty fittings |
| Carbon Steel | AISI 1018–1045 | 0.18–0.45 % C, ≤0.50 % Mn | 350–700 MPa | Balanced strength and weldability; moderate cost | Mga shaft, mga gears, Mga bracket ng istruktura |
haluang metal na bakal |
AISI 4130, 4140, 8620 | 0.15–0.25 % C; Cr, Mo, Ni, Mn additions | 600–900 MPa (HT) | Enhanced hardness, Paglaban sa Pagsusuot, elevated-temperature performance | Landing gear, haydroliko manifolds, high-pressure valves |
| Hindi kinakalawang na asero | Uri ng 304 & 316 | 18–20 % Cr, 8–12 % Ni; 2–3 % Mo (316) | 500–750 MPa | Napakahusay na paglaban sa kaagnasan; good strength at up to 800 °C | Food equipment, chemical plant parts, mga heat exchanger |
| aluminyo haluang metal | A356; 6061 | ~7 % Si Si, 0.3 % Mg (A356); 1 % Mg, 0.6 % Si Si (6061) | 200–350 MPa | Mababang density (2.7 g/cm³); magandang thermal kondaktibiti | Automotive wheels, engine housings, nalulubog ang init |
tanso / tanso |
C932, C954, C83600 | 3–10 % Sn (tanso); 60–70 % Cu, 30–40 % Zn (tanso) | 300–600 MPa | Magandang paglaban sa wear; anti-seizure; kaakit akit na pagtatapos | Mga bearing, Mga Impeller ng Bomba, pandekorasyon hardware |
| Magnesium Alloy | AZ91D | 9 % Al, 1 % Zn, balance Mg | 200–300 MPa | Extremely low density (1.8 g/cm³); high specific strength | Aerospace housings, portable tool bodies |
6. Advantages of Sand Casting
Low Tooling and Setup Cost
- Sand molds are inexpensive to produce (typically made from silica sand bonded with clay or chemical binders),
so the initial tooling cost is minimal compared to permanent-mold or die-casting processes. - This makes sand casting especially economical for small production runs, prototype parts, or one-off components.

Versatility in Part Size and Geometry
- Sand casting can accommodate very large or very small parts—blocks weighing several tons down to a few ounces.
- Complex internal geometries (mga undercuts, cores, hollows) can be formed by inserting sand cores before pouring, without expensive core-making dies.
Wide Range of Materials
- Almost any castable alloy—ferrous (hal., gray iron, ductile na bakal, bakal na bakal) or non-ferrous (hal., aluminyo, tanso, tanso, magnesiyo)—can be used in sand molds.
- This flexibility lets you choose the optimal material for strength, paglaban sa kaagnasan, or thermal properties.
Reusability of Mold Materials
- After each casting cycle, the sand mixture can be reclaimed and reused multiple times (often 95–98% recovery), reducing waste and material cost.
- Modern reclamation systems (mekanikal, thermal, or chemical reclaimers) further enhance sustainability.
Rapid Turnaround for Prototypes
- Because tooling is simply a split pattern (often wooden or 3D-printed) rather than hardened steel, mold preparation is fast—ideal for design iterations.
- Engineers can go from CAD model to physical part in days rather than weeks, accelerating product development cycles.
7. Mga Limitasyon & Technical Challenges of Sand Casting
Relatively Poor Surface Finish and Dimensional Accuracy
- Sand grains create a rough texture on the casting surface, often requiring additional machining or finishing to meet tight tolerances.
- Typical tolerances are ±0.5–1.5 mm for small parts and ±1.5–3.0 mm for larger sections, which is less precise than die-casting or investment casting.

Higher Risk of Defects
- Porosity: Gas trapped in the mold or generated during solidification can form pores in the metal, pagpapahina ng bahagi.
- Sand Inclusions: Loose sand grains may erode from the mold walls into the molten metal, causing hard spots or surface blemishes.
- Mga Pagkakamali & Cold Shuts: Inadequate metal flow or premature solidification can lead to incomplete filling or joins in the metal.
Longer Production Cycle Times
- Each casting requires mold preparation (packing, core setting, mold assembly) and post-pour shake-out, which is more time-consuming than automated high-pressure processes.
- Cooling times can be substantial for thick or massive sections, slowing overall throughput.
Labor-Intensive Process
- Many operations—mold making, core setting, fettling—rely on skilled manual labor, increasing labor costs and variability between batches.
- Automation is possible but often expensive to implement for sand-based systems.
Mga Alalahanin sa Kapaligiran at Kalusugan
- Exposure to silica dust during mold handling poses respiratory hazards unless strict dust-control measures are in place.
- Spent molding sand and used chemical binders generate waste streams that must be reclaimed or treated to avoid soil and water contamination.
Limitations on Very Thin Sections
- Thin walls (<3–4 mm) are challenging because the sand may not support fine details, and the metal may cool and solidify before filling the mold completely.
- Achieving both thin sections and good surface definition often requires alternative processes like die-casting or investment casting.
8. Key Applications of Sand Casting
Industriya ng Automotive
- Mga bloke ng engine, mga ulo ng silindro, mga kaso ng transmisyon, brake components, mga bahagi ng suspensyon.
Aerospace & Pagtatanggol
- Turbine housings, Mga Mount ng Makina, Mga bracket ng istruktura, missile components, aircraft landing gear parts.
Enerhiya & Pagbuo ng Kapangyarihan
- Turbine casings, generator frames, Mga pabahay ng bomba, valve bodies for oil and gas equipment, hydroelectric components.
Konstruksyon & Malakas na makinarya
- Mga fitting ng pipe, mga bahagi ng balbula, structural steel parts, engine components for construction equipment, agricultural machinery parts (hal., tractor housings).
Mga Kagamitan sa Industriya
- Pump and compressor casings, mga gearbox, machine tool bases, heavy-duty brackets, industrial valve bodies.
Marine & Paggawa ng barko
- Propeller hubs, mga bahagi ng engine, shipboard machinery parts, and marine pump housings.
Pangkalahatang Paggawa
- Artistic castings, custom mechanical parts, large-scale structural components, and prototypes for product development.
Custom Prototypes and Low-Volume Production
Sa wakas, sand casting excels in rapid prototyping and small-batch work.
When design teams need functional metal prototypes—whether for validation of ergonomics or field testing under real-world loads—sand casting delivers parts in 3–5 days, kumpara sa 2–4 na linggo for permanent molds.
Its minimal tooling cost (madalas sa ilalim $200 bawat pattern) makes it ideal for pilot runs and specialized applications across robotics, mga medikal na aparato, and bespoke machinery.
9. Comparison with Alternative Casting Processes
When engineers evaluate casting methods, they weigh factors such as Bahagi ng pagiging kumplikado, tapos sa ibabaw, dimensional tolerance, tooling cost, at dami ng produksyon.
Sa ibaba, we compare sand casting against two widely used alternatives—pamumuhunan paghahagis at mamatay sa paghahagis.
| Mga Criteria | buhangin paghahagis | Pamumuhunan sa Paghahagis | mamatay paghahagis |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gastos sa Tooling | Mababa ang: $50–$200 per mold; ideal for prototypes and small runs | Katamtaman hanggang sa Mataas: $1,000–$5,000+ due to wax patterns and ceramic shells | Napakataas na: $10,000–$100,000+ for steel dies; justified for mass production |
| Dami ng Produksyon | Mababa hanggang katamtaman: 1 sa 10,000+ mga bahagi | Mababa hanggang katamtaman: 100 sa 1,000+ mga bahagi | Mataas na: 50,000+ parts per run |
| Part Size Range | Very large: grams to 50+ tons | Small to medium: up to ~50 kg | Small to medium: karaniwan sa ilalim ng 10 kg |
Materials Supported |
Extremely broad: cast irons, steels, hindi kinakalawang na asero, aluminyo, tanso, magnesiyo, mga superalloys | Broad but mostly non-ferrous alloys (tanso, hindi kinakalawang na asero, aluminyo, cobalt alloys) | Limited to low melting point metals: aluminyo, sink, magnesiyo |
| Tapos na sa ibabaw (Ra) | Katamtaman: 6-12 μm | Napakahusay: ≤1 µm | Mabuti na lang: 1-3 μm |
| Dimensional Tolerances | Katamtaman: ±0.5% to ±1.5% | Masikip: ±0.1% to ±0.3% | Very tight: ±0.2% to ±0.5% |
| Lead Time | Short to moderate: 3 days to 2 mga linggo | Moderate to long: 2 sa 4 mga linggo | Very short: cycle times <30 mga segundo; overall lead time depends on die availability |
Pagiging kumplikado & Detail |
Mabuti na lang, can create complex shapes with cores; some limitations on fine detail | Napakahusay: capable of very fine detail and thin sections (<1 mm) | Katamtaman: complex geometries possible, but limited by die design |
| Mga Katangian ng Mekanikal | Sa pangkalahatan ay mabuti; depends on alloy and cooling rates | High integrity, good strength, at tigas na tigas | High strength and good surface integrity but limited alloy choices |
| Mga Karaniwang Aplikasyon | Large machine parts, mga bloke ng engine, Mga pabahay ng bomba, mabibigat na kagamitan | Mga blades ng turbine, mga bahagi ng aerospace, intricate jewelry, medikal na implants | Mga bahagi ng sasakyan, electronics housings, mga bahagi ng hardware |
| Epekto sa Kapaligiran | High recyclability of sand (90–95%) | More energy intensive due to wax and ceramic shell processing | High energy consumption in die production and metal injection |
| Cost per Part (Low Volumes) | Mababa hanggang katamtaman | Mataas na | Very high due to tooling amortization |
| Cost per Part (High Volumes) | Katamtaman hanggang mababa | Katamtaman | Very low |
When to Choose Sand Casting?
- Mababa ang- to Mid-Volume Production: Sa ibaba 10,000 mga bahagi, sand’s low tooling outlay minimizes per-part cost.
- Large or Heavy Parts: Components over 50 kg o hanggang sa 50 tons only suit sand molds.
- Special Alloys & High-Temperature Materials: Sand molds handle stainless, mga superalloys, and cast irons without die-wear concerns.
- Rapid Prototyping or Design Iteration: 3D-printed patterns and quick mold changes slash lead times to a few days.
- Complex Internal Geometry: Sand cores produce deep cavities and undercuts without expensive tooling modifications.
10. Pangwakas na Salita
Sand casting endures as a foundational manufacturing method, pagbabalanse economy, maraming nalalaman, at scalability.
By integrating digital design, advanced binder chemistries, and real-time quality controls, today’s foundries overcome traditional limitations—producing reliable, complex castings across industries.
As sustainability and rapid prototyping pressures grow, sand casting’s unique combination of low entry cost, Kakayahang umangkop sa materyal, at size capability ensures its continued relevance well into the future.
Sa DEZE, we stand ready to partner with you in leveraging these advanced techniques to optimize your component designs, material selections, and production workflows.
ensuring that your next project exceeds every performance and sustainability benchmark.
Mga FAQ
What is the typical size range for sand-cast parts?
Parts can range from small components (hal., mga panaklaw) to very large structures (hal., mga propeller ng barko), with some foundries capable of casting parts weighing several tons.
What are common surface finish issues in sand casting?
Parts may have a rough surface texture due to the sand mold. Post-casting processes like machining, paggiling ng mga, or blasting are often used to improve finish.
Can sand casting be used for high-volume production?
While sand casting is feasible for low-to-medium volumes, high-volume production may be more cost-effective with methods like die casting due to faster cycle times and higher mold durability.
Is sand casting suitable for prototyping?
Oo nga, sand casting is often used for prototypes due to its low tooling costs and ability to produce functional parts quickly, even for complex designs.
How are cores used in sand casting?
Cores (made of sand or resin) form internal cavities or features in the casting.
They are placed in the mold before pouring and removed after solidification, often via vibration or melting.



