The Die-casting Machine
The three important requisites for good die-casting are the machine, the dies and the metal. The casting machine is fully as essential as either of the other requisites, and although there are a number of different styles of casting machines in use, each of which has its advantages over the others, especially in the eyes of their respective designers, the fundamental principles upon which they all operate are the same. In each there is the melting pot and the burner, the cylinder and the piston for forcing the metal into the dies, and the dies with the opening and closing device. In some machines pressure is applied to the metal by hand, in others power is used, and in still another class the metal is forced into the dies with compressed air. The provisions for opening and closing the dies vary in the different machines; there are various means employed for cutting the sprue, and the styles of heaters are numerous.
One or two of the largest firms in the die-casting industry have automatic casting machines for turning out duplicate work in large quantities very rapidly. These machines are complicated and are only profitable on large quantities of work, and for that reason their use is not extensive. In general, their operating principles are the same as in the case of the hand machines, but provision is made for automatically opening and closing the dies, compressing the metal, and ejecting the castings.