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Learn About Jewelry Technology & Manufacturing
Lost Wax (Investment) Casting
One of the earliest metal technologies developed was the lost wax casting
process, developed for copper and adapted for gold in the Middle East at least
4,000 years BC. The earliest known example in gold was made in Ur, Mesopotamia
in 2,600 BC. Today, the lost wax (or investment casting, as it is also known)
process is the most used process for the manufacture of gold Jewelry. However,
it has gone through a considerable evolution, particularly since the mid-20th
century, with the development of more sophisticated equipment and materials.
It is a complex process consisting of many steps:
a) A master model is made in a hard alloy such as nickel silver (a
copper-nickel-zinc alloy) or often in silver.
b) A rubber mold is made by surrounding the master model with sheet
rubber in a mold frame. Placing it in a heated press and vulcanizing it. On
cooling, it is cut with a scalpel into to halves, thus releasing the master
model.
c) The rubber mold is used to make many copies of the master model in
wax, by use of a wax injector which injects molten wax, often under a vacuum to
remove air from the mold, into the mold cavity. On cooling, the wax is removed
to give an exact copy of the original master model in wax.
d) The waxes are assembled into a 'tree' around a central feeder or sprue.
This tree is cleaned of dust, and placed in a metal cylinder, known as a
'flask'. Special investment powder is mixed with water to a slurry and poured
around the wax tree. It is placed under a low vacuum to remove air bubbles and
allowed to set and harden to form the refractory mold.
e) The flask is then inverted and the wax removed by melting in steam or
in air in a furnace (the burn-out oven. The investment mold is then carefully
heated in the burn-out oven in set stages to the maximum burn-out temperature of
750°C for several hours and then cooled down to the temperature required for
casting (typically in range 450 - 650°C).
f) The hot flask is placed in a casting machine. The gold metal or alloy
is melted in a crucible and then cast into the investment mold. It is allowed to
cool and solidify and is then quenched into water which helps to break off the
investment mold material to leave the cast gold 'tree'. The castings are cut off
from the tree, assembled into the Jewelry pieces and polished.
Defects in castings can be a major quality problem with investment casting,
particularly porosity. This latter can be due to solidification shrinkage or to
gas dissolved in the molten alloy. Many problems such as gas porosity, sandy
surfaces and fins and watermarks can be attributed to poor investment mold
practice and poor temperature control. There are two types of casting machine in
use - the older technology centrifugal casting machine and the more modern
static vacuum assist machines. The latter are preferred for quality and
productivity reasons.
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