Sprue (manufacturing)
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A sprue is the passage through which liquid material is introduced into a mold. In many cases it controls the flow of metal into the mold. During casting or molding, the material in the sprue will solidify and need to be removed from the finished part. This excess material is also called a sprue.
Casting
In casting, a sprue is the passage through which a molten material is introduced into a mold, and the term also refers to the excess material which solidifies in the sprue passage. In sand casting, the sprue is formed by a dowel, which is removed from the sand to make the hole into which the metal is poured.
Function
Sprues can serve as filters, as heat sinks, and as feeders. Bronze, in particular, has a high shrinkage rate as it is cooling; a sprue can continue to provide molten metal to the casting, provided that it is large enough to retain enough heat to stay liquid, as metal in the main casting cools and shrinks. The design of the sprue and runner system can be also used to prevent dross and sand from continuing into the main cavity; this may include adding porous material to the runners or using cyclonic separation to move the dross to the side of the sprue.
Sprue design
The design of the sprue gating and runner is also essential for casting. The design can incorporate either bottom or vertical gating.
For bottom gating
where:
- = Time for filling
- = Area of mold
- = Area of gate
- = Acceleration due to gravity
- = Total height
- = Height of mold cavity
This equation may change if the height of gating is equal to height of casting material.
Then the equation will be:
or, simplified,
where:
- = Time for filling
- = Area of mold
- = Area of gate
- = Acceleration due to gravity
- = Total height (Height of gating + height of mold cavity)
- = Height of mold cavity
Injection molding
In injection molding, sprue refers to the passage through which a liquid material (such as polystyrene or polyvinyl chloride) flows into a die, where the material solidifies to form parts. Sprue also refers to the material that solidifies in these passages, forming a framework that attaches the parts in a roughly planar arrangement.
Sprues, runners, and gates
Some moldmakers distinguish the sprue, the gate, and the runner. The sprue is a large-diameter channel through which plastic flows, usually around the edges of the part or along straight lines. The runner is a smaller channel from the sprue to the individual part. An analogy may be found in a water system that employs a water main (sprue) and smaller pipes (runners) to individual houses. The gate is the location at which the molten plastic enters the mold cavity and is often evidenced by a small nub or projection (the "gate mark") on the molded piece.
Many scale-model kits are made from injection-molded plastic. Hobbyists typically remove the parts of a model kit from the runner using a sharp craft knife or razor saw. The sprues usually form a rectangle with the runners and parts inside which makes them easier to box.
Model makers sometimes use sprues or runners as raw material to fabricate additional parts, such as railings on model ships, antenna wires on airplanes, or greebles on fictional spacecraft.
Sprues in model kits often include engravings to identify the parts by number.