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Condensed from the July, 1998 issue of
Modern Casting magazine.
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cover.
The full article is available in Adobe Acrobat (.pdf) format
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By capitalizing on the advantages of its unique counter-gravity processes, this
investment caster has flourished in the high-volume and thin-wall casting
markets. By Alfred T. Spada, Associate Editor
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Hitchiner Manufacturing Co., Inc.
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Milford, New Hampshire
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Facilities:
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Ferrous Div., Littleton and Milford, New Hampshire; Gas Turbine Div., Milford,
New Hampshire; Nonferrous Div., O'Fallon, Missouri; Mexico Div.-Hitchiner S.A.
de C.V., Santiago Tianguistenco, Mexico; Metal Casting Technology, Inc., Milford, New Hampshire.
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Total manufacturing space:
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846,000 sq ft (by the end of 1998).
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Casting data:
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aluminum alloys; copper-, cobalt- and nickel-based alloys; ductile, austempered
ductile and heat resistant iron; carbon, stainless, and low- and high-alloy
steel.
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1997 net sales:
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$165 million.
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1997 shipments:
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over 35 million castings.
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Main markets served:
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automotive, aerospace, electronics, firearms, tools and golf.
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Castings produced:
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automobile engine roller rocker arms, motorcycle intake manifolds, electronics
housings, various jet engine castings, multi-tool jaws, and golf irons and
woods.
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Processes:
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aluminum and steel die wax pattern injection, investment molding and induction
melting.
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Value-added capabilities:
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tool- and diemaking, machining, finishing and polishing.
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Major customers:
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GM Corp., Chrysler Corp., BMW AG, Pratt & Whitney, General Electric Co. and
Callaway Golf Co.
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Employees:
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3700.
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Year founded:
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1946.
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Staff officials:
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John H. Morison, III, president/CEO; Frederick R. Lofgren, executive vice
president; G. Dixon Chandley, vice president-technology; Donald J. Buska, vice
president and general manager-Mexico Div.; Frederick F. Marston, Jr., vice
president-international sales and marketing; Richard L. Sharkey, vice
president-corporate engineering; Gregory J. Babich, vice president and general
manager-U.S. Ferrous Div.; James E. Pasqualoni, vice president-North American
sales and marketing.
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Turning the casting world upside down might be one way of describing Hitchiner
Manufacturing Co., Inc., Milford, New Hampshire, during its rise to North
America's largest producer of commercial investment castings.
Literally, this family-owned investment caster has turned the metalcasting
process upside down with its unique counter-gravity casting method that draws
the melt up into an inverted mold via the application of a vacuum.
Figuratively, Hitchiner has taken an upside-down approach to its marketing. By
focusing on the counter-gravity process, this investment caster has established
a niche capability in the high-production and thin-walled ferrous and
nonferrous casting markets.
In the words of President and CEO John H. Morison III: "We are a unique
foundry, not because of what we produce, but because of our process. This
process is our advantage, and our success in metalcasting revolves around
marketing this process to our customers."
These customersGM, BMW, Pratt & Whitney, General Electric and
Callaway Golf, to name a feware drawn from different industries, each
posing a unique set of requirements. It has been Hitchiner's ability to adapt
to these customers and their casting needs, and provide a total casting
packagetooling, casting, machining, finishing and polishingat
higher quality levels and lower costs, which has paved the road to success.
With a 32% increase in sales since 1995 (from $125 to $165 million), and the
production of over 35 million castings last year, this company, which began
with a lost wax tradition, believes it now holds the investment casting process
for the future.
A Lost Wax Tradition
In 1946, as a member of the War Production Board during World War II, A. Fred
Hitchiner saw an opportunity with a 5000-year-old process called lost wax
casting. It could provide near net-shape precision parts with specialized
alloys that could not be readily shaped by alternative methods. He purchased an
eight-employee, solid mold (lost wax) brass foundry in Long Island, New York
and relocated it to Manchester, New Hampshire as Hitchiner Manufacturing Co.
Unfortunately for A.F. Hitchiner, the region's industrial base had disappeared
to a large extent, and it was suffering from a depressed economy. Luckily,
George Abbot Morison and his son John H. Morison (father of the current
president) saw the same opportunity in the lost wax process that he had, and
bought out the fledgling foundry. With A.F. Hitchiner staying on board to
supervise sales and the Morison family in control, Hitchiner began to take
shape and moved to its current home in Milford in 1951.
In 1961, the firm became the first investment caster to install a ceramic shell
mold building machine, which lowered the cost of mold making versus the
traditional solid-mold process. That same year, Hitchiner introduced the
world's first mechanized investment casting plant with automated shell-building
equipment as well as power- and free-conveyor systems. It also became the first
firm to use automated aluminum molds for wax patterns and large induction
melting furnaces.
In order to increase market penetration, the father-son team recognized the
importance of combining increased productivity with reduced production
costswithout ever compromising quality.
Countergravity
"In 1969, Hitchiner was a family-run company that again was looking for
something differentan edge," said G. Dixon Chandley, vice
president-technology for Hitchiner. "We needed to find a stable market and
solid customers and knew that if we could remove 40% of the cost of investment
castings, we could approach the automakers." Up until that point, the
investment caster had focused on firearms, small machine parts and telephone
equipment.
However, removing this cost from a casting was more than just a tweak of the
process. According to Chandley, "We needed to do something dramatic."
Chandley's idea that laid the groundwork for Hitchiner's future was to turn the
casting process upside down and remove the gating system. By inverting the mold
and applying a vacuum to draw the metal up into the mold, the foundry could
better control the melt and eliminate the turbulence that traditional gravity
pouring created. Because extensive gating wouldn't be needed as turbulence was
eliminated, Hitchiner decreased the amount of metal poured per casting.
"The cost of investment castings is in the ceramic, the metal and the cost of
melting the metal," said Chandley. "If you get rid of the gating, vacuum-draw
the metal into the molds and freeze the castings, the metal in the sprue goes
back to the furnace, reducing the metal per casting. In addition, this would
allow us to pour more castings per mold and lower the cost of ceramic per
sprue."
However, a funny thing happened during the development of this counter-gravity
casting process. While testing the soundness of their upside-down castings, the
foundry realized that the new process provided additional benefits:
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More Castings per Investment TreeOnce the castings have solidified in the
mold, the melt in the sprue flows back to the furnace, thus the castings do not
require a cutoff from the sprue. Therefore, Hitchiner is able to assemble more
castings per investment tree (Fig. 1), lowering production cost. Depending on
casting size and configuration, the pattern population may be up to five times
that of the standard investment tree. In addition to this sprue advantage, with
certain castings Hitchiner produces wax injection molds that form a 360° wax pattern ring
to create the sprue. Instead of attaching each casting's pattern one by one to
the sprue, Hitchiner interlocks wax rings that contain a whole level of
patterns. The lack of cutoff after casting and human hand involvement during
assembly allows Hitchiner to inject as many parts per wax ring and cast as many
parts per investment tree as a stable shell mold can envelop.
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Cleaner MeltSince the melt is drawn through the sprue from below the
surface with little turbulence, a cleaner meltfree of slag or
drossenters the mold. Comparative tests of ladle-poured and
counter-gravity cast steel parts showed that counter-gravity parts exhibited an
85% reduction in non-metallic inclusions. In addition, depending on the alloy,
machining tool life increases of 100-500% have been reported.
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Thinner SectionsDue to the full vacuum differential that each level in a
counter-gravity investment tree receives, the back air pressure, which is found
in the thinner sections of gravity poured castings and causes fluid flow
resistance, isn't present. Therefore, the counter-gravity process allows the
casting of sections as thin as 0.015 in.
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Grain Structure ControlThe counter-gravity process allows Hitchiner to
cast at lower melt temperatures (up to 300F lower) than traditional
metalcasting, therefore the size and type of grains developed can be widely
varied. If the casting requires a fine internal grain structure, a low metal
temperature can be used. For aluminum, if the dendritic arm spacing needs to be
minimal for better mechanical properties, then low metal and mold temperatures
are used for rapid solidification. Table 1 illustrates the high mechanical
casting properties the counter-gravity process is able to achieve.
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No Melt Splatter or TurbulenceThe mold is filled at a controlled rate,
with each level of the investment tree receiving full vacuum differential to
fill completely before the level above it starts filling. This discourages the
formation of oxides from the splattering of the melt that accompanies
traditional gravity pouring.
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Less Metal per MoldIn general, the lack of a sprue or complex gating
system allows 60- 94% of the drawn metal to be used to produce the casting. In
gravity-poured parts only 15- 50% is typical.
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Lower Machining and Finishing CostsOnce the castings have solidified and
the excess melt in the sprue returns to the furnace, the castings are left with
gate stubs only 0.25-0.5 in. long. In conjunction with the inherent surface
finish advantages of investment casting and the fewer non-metallic inclusions,
Hitchiner is left with minimal after-casting costs.
The two benefits that define Hitchiner and its counter-gravity casting are more
castings per investment tree and the ability to cast thin-walled sections.
These advantages allow the Ferrous Div. in Milford and the Mexico Div. to
produce high-volume golf irons and steel auto engine roller rocker arms, the
Gas Turbine Div. in Milford to produce nickel-based floatwall liners and
after-burner parts for aircraft engines, and the Nonferrous Div. in O'Fallon,
Missouri, to produce aluminum electronics housingsall with the same
counter- gravity approach.
"Our specialization is our process not our product," said Morison. "We maintain
a variety of customers and castings. If we don't have a good mix of customers
and products, we will be tied to a particular industry and its ups and downs.
Our current situation doesn't allow that."
The Steps to Counter-Gravity Casting
Hitchiner's counter-gravity casting began with the CLA process. Through the
years, advancements have been made to adapt the process for vacuum melts and
resin-bonded sand molds, however, the basic principles remain the same.
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Step 1an operator places a ceramic shell mold, sprue end down,
in a mold chamber. The chamber is rotated over the furnace.
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Step 2the open end of the vacuum chamber with the sprue
exposed is lowered into the melt. Concurrently, a vacuum is applied to the
chamber, which removes the air from within the shell mold and chamber and draws
the melt into the mold through the central sprue.
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Step 3once the castings have solidified (solidification time
is dependent upon the metal and casting size), the vacuum is released, and the
excess unsolidified metal in the sprue flows back into the furnace. The absence
of the central sprue results in only loose castings in the poured shell mold,
ready for finalbut minimalmachining and finishing.
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Hitchiner Licenses Counter-Gravity Worldwide
What began in 1964 as a license of Hitchiner's automated shell building
technology to Finland's OY Saco AB has developed into the globalization of its
counter-gravity casting processes.
Hitchiner's licensing of counter-gravity technology differs according to the
process. Licensees of the investment casting processes (CLA, CLV, SSCLA, CLI,
SSCV and CLIX) receive an exclusive agreement for their territory/market, which
leaves the cost open to negotiation.
However, licensees of the sand casting processes (CLAS and LSVAC) receive a
nonexclusive worldwide agreement for the technology. In addition, these
licensees are serviced by CSI Industrial Systems Corp., Grayling, Michigan,
which entered into an agreement with Hitchiner to provide equipment and systems
to sand casting licensees.
The typical cost for the sand casting technology is based upon: a signing fee
($50,000-200,000), the cost of the counter-gravity mold handling and casting
equipment ($50,000-1.25 million), and a 4% royalty based on casting sales. This
license includes technical support and upgrades to current counter-gravity
technology. Once the license has expired, the licensee keeps the technology,
but isn't privy to technical support or upgrades.
As with any major capital expansion, licensees must adapt their foundries for
the new equipment and communicate with Hitchiner to develop counter-gravity
systems for their operation.
"We take the basic counter-gravity technology and further develop it for the
licensee's specific products and foundry," said Stephen Checkoway,
director-license administration for Hitchiner.
For any of the counter-gravity processes, the only unique equipment required is
the counter-gravity mold handling and casting system. For investment casters,
standard shell building, autoclaves, burnout ovens and mold cooling systems can
be used in conjunction with the counter-gravity systems. For sand casters, any
standard resin-bonded molding system and shakeout line can be used.
Current North American licensees of Hitchiner's technology include Wescast
Industries, Inc., Wingham, Ontario, Hitchcock Industries, Inc., Minneapolis,
CWC Castings-Div. of Textron, Inc., Muskegon, Michigan, Alloy Engineering &
Casting Co.-a Digitron Co., Champaign, Illinois, and Tallix, Beacon, New York.
Following, in order of patent, are the various processes Hitchiner licenses:
CLA (1972)
The father of all of Hitchiner's counter-gravity processes, CLA is used
for a multitude of ferrous and nonferrous castings such as golf club heads. The
process is described in the sidebar "The Steps to Counter-Gravity Casting."
CLV (1975)
This is an investment casting process for superalloy parts such as jet
engine components that require vacuum-melted alloys. Its process is the same
concept as CLA, but the entire melting and casting sequence occurs under vacuum
or argon atmosphere.
CLAS (1982)
This is Hitchiner's first counter-gravity process for sand casting, and
it is used for high volume, ferrous air melt castings such as pipe fittings. A
resin-bonded mold is lowered a precise distance into the melt, and a vacuum is
applied to draw the metal through numerous pin gates directly to feed the
castings.
LSVAC (1990)
A derivative of CLAS, LSVAC is a sand casting process for high-volume,
complex, air melt castings, such as iron and steel exhaust manifolds.
Thin-walled, resin-bonded molds are backed with reusable, loose sand and
lowered a precise distance into the melt. Vacuum is applied to the mold to draw
the metal up a runner system to feed the castings.
SSCLA (1991)
It is the same process as CLA, except the ceramic investment shell is
only five layers thick and is backed with reusable loose sand, resulting in
lower ceramic costs and no leaker shells. It is applicable to high volume
ferrous castings such as auto engine roller rocker arms.
CLI (1991)
This is an investment casting process for castings such as missile parts
produced in vacuum alloys. CLI uses the same concept as CLA, but the melting is
done in a vacuum and the parts are cast under argon atmosphere. Larger shells
can be cast, and the cost is lower than CLV.
SSCV (1994)
The process is similar to SSCLA, but instead it has a valve at the bottom
of the sprue so the melt is held in the sprue, instead of returning to the
furnace, to feed larger castings as they solidify. SSCV is a high-production
process for larger (up to 450 lb) thick-walled (up to 6 in.) ferrous castings
such as aerospace parts.
CLIX (1994)
This process is used for reactive alloys such as titanium aluminide. The
melt undergoes an exothermic reaction in the furnace before it is drawn up into
the investment shell. Hitchiner produces titanium golf woods and
titanium-aluminide valves with this process.
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Process Specialization
Through the years, Hitchiner has been able to adapt its counter-gravity casting
process to an application or a customer. In 1969, the first counter-gravity
system was coined CLA for counter-gravity low-pressure air-melt alloys. It is
the basis for all other counter-gravity processes. Each adaptation of the
original CLA machine (see sidebar "Hitchiner Licenses Counter-Gravity
Worldwide"), while providing the casting benefits as outlined previously, also
has benefits specific to its purpose. These adaptations are the cornerstone of
this investment caster's marketing.
"Anybody can make an investment casting," said James Pasqualoni, vice
president-North American sales and marketing. "We have grown in the industry
because the specialization of our process allows us to make various types of
castings at a better quality and lower cost."
Castings Hitchiner cites as a specialization of its process are the automobile
engine roller rocker arms produced by the Ferrous Div. in Milford for BMW. In
1994, Hitchiner approached BMW about the possibility of producing the carbon
steel rocker arms for their M43 and M44 engines. European foundries had been
producing their equivalent to roller rocker armsroller finger followers
and othersas castings. It is a small, intricate, thin-walled part, which
can't have surface defects and must be produced in high volumes with visual
appeal. Hitchiner saw the part as an opportunity for its supported shell
counter-gravity process (SSCLA) and became the first U.S. foundry to produce a
rocker arm for an OEM (aftermarket rocker arms are cast).
The investment caster converted what was previously a stamping and provided two
crucial advantages to the casting: stiffness and lubrication flow. As engine
efficiency increases, it runs faster and hotter, and the rocker arm must
withstand this intense heat and pressure. The cast rocker arm provides a
stiffness and strength not available from a stamped version and includes a
push-rod socket, among other channels, to allow lubrication flow in the engine.
According to Hitchiner, if this part had been cast via traditional investment
casting, it would have twice the cost per casting, and, as a result, never
would have been converted. However, with the successful casting via
counter-gravity, Hitchiner now produces rocker arms daily for BMW and GM (Fig.
2) and is developing a prototype for Chrysler.
MCT Provides R&D to Hitchiner, General Motors
The success of its counter-gravity casting processes in-house and with its
licensees, as well as its desire to further adapt counter-gravity to sand and
lost foam casting, prompted the investment caster to search for an R&D
partner in 1986 that would expand its research capabilities beyond its small
technical center. The first door Hitchiner knocked on was General Motors Corp.,
Detroit, Michigan. It also was the last.
"GM's interest started out as a potential opportunity for high-alloyed
compositions of exhaust manifolds," said Ron Cafferty of GM Powertrain and
secretary of MCT's Board of Directors. "These discussions opened our eyes to
other opportunities for counter-gravity casting technology. Hitchiner wasn't
focused on automotive applications, so it brought to the table different
experiences, different ideas and different paradigms."
GM and Hitchiner formed a joint venture, Metal Casting Technology, Inc. (MCT),
in Milford, New Hampshire, as an R&D center "to generate useful, new, near
net-shape casting technology," said MCT President G. Dixon Chandley. Since
1986, it has developed 18 patented processes.
The 24,000-sq-ft facility houses 25 engineers and technicians who divide their
time between investment casting, automotive/GM and floating research (40%, 40%
and 20% respectively). Some of the technological breakthroughs the center has
produced include Hitchiner's SSCLA and SSCV processes and an automated system
to mechanically assemble ring pattern waxes into a sprue.
In 1997, MCT established a prototype production facility for liquid hot
isostatic pressing (LHIP). Liquid HIPping uses pressurized hot molten salts
instead of the high gas pressure of conventional HIPping to eliminate internal
porosity in castings. Replacing the 27,000 psi gas of conventional HIPping with
a liquid has made the process safer as well as faster, as a casting can be
liquid-HIPped in seconds as opposed to hours. According to Cafferty, this
process could eliminate X-ray testing, as castings automatically will be HIPped
to a first-rate quality level, skipping the inspection process.
Also currently under development at MCT are commercial casting production
processes for titanium- and zirconium-based alloys, metal matrix composite
parts and the counter-gravity casting of 2-3 mm wall thickness stainless steel
exhaust manifolds using the LSVAC counter-gravity loose sand casting process
with both shell sand molds and lost foam patterns.
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Process Expansion
With the ramp-up of its new 89,000 sq ft state-of-the-art Automated Casting
Facility in Milford this fall, Hitchiner is working toward more casting
successes like the rocker arm applications. According to Chandley, automotive
applications will continue to provide the investment caster's foundation as the
firm estimates that it now produces 95% of all automotive investment castings
in the U.S.
Hitchiner believes its success with the casting of stainless steel exhaust
manifolds using the loose sand casting counter-gravity process, LSVAC, will
pave the way for this part's production in the early part of the next century.
In addition, the new supported shell counter-gravity check valve adaptation,
the SSCV process, allows Hitchiner and its licensees to pursue markets for
larger, one-of-a-kind, name-recognition castings.
"Even though we are a company that has a process that is 26 years old, we are
constantly reinventing ourselves," said Morison. "We have a multitude of
opportunities in our niche and are always looking for new applications for our
processes and our capabilities. But, it is up to us to go to our customers and
show them what we can do."
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Last modified and validated 13-Aug-2002.
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