Introduction
Detailed Explanation of Shrinkage and Temperature for Each Process
Casting
Casting methods have relatively high shrinkage rates. This is because the metal undergoes a dramatic volume change from liquid to room temperature, requiring dimensional allowances in the mold design to compensate.
- Sand & Shell Casting: These two methods have the highest linear shrinkage rates, approximately 1.0–2.0%. Molds are typically used at room temperature, but shell molds can be preheated to approximately 200°C to improve casting quality.
- Gravity/Low-Pressure Casting: Shrinkage rates are approximately 0.8–1.2%. To ensure smooth filling of the molten metal, the mold temperature must be maintained between 200 and 350°C (for aluminum, for example).
- High-pressure die casting: Due to the high pressure used, the microstructure is denser and the effective linear shrinkage is lower, approximately 0.6–0.8%. The mold operating temperature is also quite high; for aluminum die casting, the mold temperature must be controlled between 180 and 250°C.
Forging
Forging is a bulk forming process that does not consider linear shrinkage. Dimensional control depends primarily on mold accuracy and subsequent heat treatment processes. This is a typical ultra-high-temperature process. For example, in hot forging of steel, the billet must be heated to 900–1200°C, while the mold temperature is maintained between 200 and 300°C.
Aluminum Extrusion
Aluminum extrusion involves extruding the material at high temperatures. Although thermal expansion and contraction occur, this shrinkage is typically controlled during the manufacturing process. Design considerations primarily include allowances for areas requiring CNC secondary machining. Extrusion is a standard high-temperature process, requiring the preheating of the billet and mold to 430–500°C.
Sheet/Tube Forming
This process primarily operates at room temperature and does not involve drastic temperature fluctuations, so shrinkage in the finished product is negligible. The design primarily considers the material’s elastic rebound, not thermal shrinkage.
Key Concepts
- Shrinkage: In hot processes such as casting, this refers to the percentage reduction in total volume or linear dimension of the molten metal after cooling from the pouring temperature to room temperature. The mold dimensions must be pre-sized based on this ratio to achieve the correct finished product dimensions.
- Process Temperature: This refers to the specific temperature to which the material or mold must be heated during processing to achieve optimal plasticity, flowability, or undergo necessary physical changes. Precise temperature control is essential for ensuring consistent product quality.
Conclusion
In general, any process involving forming metal from a liquid or high-temperature solid state (such as casting, forging, and extrusion) must strictly consider the effects of shrinkage and temperature. Processes primarily performed at room temperature (such as sheet metal forming and CNC machining) are less susceptible to thermal shrinkage. Selecting appropriate design parameters based on your product’s precision requirements and manufacturing method is the first step to successful mass production.

