Aluminum sand casting for Chenery Gnome Rotary

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albd5a

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I am getting ready to try my hand at a sand casting: the 1/5 scale Chenery rotary Crankcase in aluminum. I am not convinced that I would need a ‘split pattern’ for this casting. Are there any suggestions on where to sprue / gate pattern this mold? Thanks, Norman
 
Opinions on how to approach making a casting for the Chenery Gnome Rotary will vary.
I can offer one way to do it.

A photo of what I think the casting would look like is at post #22 here:
https://www.homemodelenginemachinist.com/threads/les-chenery-rotary-engine-1-5.31718/page-2

Assuming the casting is laying flat on its back, with the crankshaft facing straight upwards:
It probably would be easier to split the pattern hozirontally at the centerline of the cylinders, but you can always use a follower board with a one-piece pattern.

I think I would use a 3-piece flask, and let the runner be in the lowest flask.
The runner would be horseshoe-shaped, with a vertical sprue at the center of the horseshoe.
Two long knife gates from the runner, one each side, into the bottom/side of the crankcase.

You could use spin traps at the ends of the runners if desired.

The core in the center would be round, with radial coreprints going out for the cylinder holes.

My 3D model machine is not set up at the moment, so I can't sketch it up.

Extend the bottom of the casting down to allow machining allowance, and to allow the gates to enter the mold cavity.
Then machine the gates off.

You could add a boss on the top of the casting to allow you to grip it, and then machine that boss off.

I would consider using a sodium-silicate bound mold for the cores and mold, since this part seems to be relatively small.

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I'm not sure how you can cast it without a split mould unless you are going to investment cast. Pat's link on page 2 looks to show a crankcase cut from solid so it does not have the round bosses that the cylinders screw into or the webs between them.

Just don't feed it via a "cast "surface and at such a small size I would not bother with cores, you don't see it on others. Just a single hole through the middle which does not need a core

There is one up for sale at the moment on ebay and also on MECH forum which may save you the bother
 

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I have made bound sand pattern halves, and I use snap flasks.
So once the flask is removed, there needs to be something to index the cope with the drag exactly.
There are several ways to do the indexing, but the way I do it is before I remove the flasks, but after the two mold haves have hardened, I drill two 1/4" holes in the mold with a 12" long drill bit, and use 1/4" wood dowls inserted in the holes to get the mold halves to fit back together perfectly.

If you are using a follower board, and green sand, the follower board does not have to register to anything, but when you remove the follower board, and add the 2nd flask half, that flask half must index to the first flask half with dowls/pins.
The follower board just has to be larger than or the same size as the flask.

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If using woodern patterns then a follower board would be considerably harder to make than the actual pattern. Easier if you are 3D printing as it is just a simple boolean subtraction.

Though if in the hole foundry I suppose you could simply scoop away the sand down to the mid line.
 
If you put a pattern in a flask, and fill the flask, ram the sand, etc., then you should flip the flask, and scoop down to the partline from the backside, since the chances of getting good compaction on the sand below the pattern are not that good.

The Navy Foundry Manual decribes a "False Cope Method", where an irregular part is rough molded to make a temporary cope, then a permanent drag mold is made, and finally a permanent cope mold made.
Good for irregular shapes, broken parts that are used for patterns, etc.
One use of this method is to make molds for boat propellers.

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As I said in the other thread unless you have a 3D printer there will be a lot of work making a follower for this part. The actual pattern is very simple in wood but to get a good fitting follower will be much more work.

The ring and it's web can be turned from two flat pieces of wood glued together with a sheet of copy paper between. Then bore 9 radial holes and glue in your round pieces which can again be turned as a long length with paper on the split line and then cut to length. Bondo the fillets and once sanded just split it apart along the paper line.

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If you want a load more work then make a follower by carving this out of wood, I've not shown the radii needed to clear the fillets on the pattern.

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To me for a one off it is a wast of time making a follower unless you can print it, even then is there any point?
 
You don't need all that. You only need what is 'seen' at the parting line. Just an annular recess and some shaped dowel like pieces let in to the periphery for the spaces between the cylinders. I would draw it, but I don't have time right now.
 
I suppose you could, something like this with spacers under it.
 

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