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Additive Manufacturing and Casting Technology Comparison: Mechanical Properties, Productivity and Cost Benchmark Cover

Additive Manufacturing and Casting Technology Comparison: Mechanical Properties, Productivity and Cost Benchmark

By: A. Vevers,  A. Kromanis,  E. Gerins and  J. Ozolins  
Open Access
|May 2018

Abstract

The casting technology is one of the oldest production technologies in the world but in the recent years metal additive manufacturing also known as metal 3D printing has been evolving with huge steps. Both technologies have capabilities to produce parts with internal holes and at first glance surface roughness is similar for both technologies, which means that for precise dimensions parts have to be machined in places where precise fit is necessary. Benchmark tests have been made to find out if parts which are produced with metal additive manufacturing can be used to replace parts which are produced with casting technology. Most of the comparative tests have been made with GJS-400-15 grade which is one of the most popular cast iron grades. To compare mechanical properties samples have been produced using additive manufacturing and tested for tensile strength, hardness, surface roughness and microstructure and then the results have been compared with the samples produced with casting technology. In addition, both technologies have been compared in terms of the production time and production costs to see if additive manufacturing is competitive with the casting technology. The original paper has been written in the Latvian language as part of the Master Thesis within the framework of the production technology study programme at Riga Technical University.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/lpts-2018-0013 | Journal eISSN: 2255-8896 | Journal ISSN: 0868-8257
Language: English
Page range: 56 - 63
Published on: May 19, 2018
Published by: Institute of Physical Energetics
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 6 issues per year

© 2018 A. Vevers, A. Kromanis, E. Gerins, J. Ozolins, published by Institute of Physical Energetics
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.