What Are the Stages of the Die Casting Injection Process?

lavorazione CNC termoplastica

The die casting injection process is a precisely orchestrated sequence of speed and pressure adjustments that transforms molten metal into high-quality parts. While it may seem like a single “injection” step, it actually unfolds in distinct stages—each designed to solve a specific challenge, from expelling air to preventing defects like shrinkage or flash. These stages vary slightly by equipment type (PER ESEMPIO., hot vs. macchine da camera fredda) and alloy (alluminio vs. zinco), but three mainstream classification systems dominate industry use: the 5-stage (theoretical), 3-stage (simplified), and 4-stage (modern machine) Modelli. But what happens in each stage? How do they differ? And how to choose the right classification for your production? This article answers these questions with technical details, parameter benchmarks, e applicazioni del mondo reale.

1. Principi principali: Why Staged Injection Matters

Before diving into specific stages, it’s critical to understand the “why” behind staged injection. Molten metal behaves differently under varying speed and pressure—rushing it too fast causes turbulence (trapping air and oxide films), while moving it too slow leads to premature solidification (causing undercasting). Staged injection solves this by:

  • Expelling air: Low-speed stages push air out of the pressure chamber and runners, avoiding bubbles in the final part.
  • Preventing splashing: Gentle initial movement stops molten metal from splashing against mold walls (which creates cold shuts).
  • Ensuring full filling: High-speed stages quickly fill complex cavities before the metal cools.
  • Compacting metal: Final pressure stages eliminate shrinkage and boost part density.

Every stage works together to balance flow efficiency (filling the mold quickly) E prevenzione dei difetti (avoiding air, chiusure fredde, or flash)—the key to consistent die casting quality.

2. Three Mainstream Stage Classifications: Un confronto dettagliato

The industry uses three primary ways to divide the injection process, each tailored to different equipment and production goals. The table below breaks down each classification, its stages, parametri chiave, e casi d'uso ideali:

ClassificationStagesKey Objectives & Dettagli tecniciTypical Parameters (Leghe di alluminio, Camera fredda)Ideal Application
1. 5-Stage Division (Basic Theory)1. Preparation StageAdjust initial machine state: Reset punch to starting position; preheat pressure chamber to 150–200°C.- Load molten metal into the pressure chamber (volume = part weight + 5–10% di rifiuti).Punch position: 0mm (starting point)- Pressure chamber temp: ±10°C toleranceAll die casting machines; used for training and process validation.
2. Slow Sealing StagePunch moves at low speed (0.1–0.3m/s) to seal the feeding port.- Push molten metal to the front of the pressure chamber—expels 80–90% of air.– Velocità: 0.1–0.3m/s- Travel distance: 50–100mm (covers feeding port)Prevents air from being drawn back into the pressure chamber; critical for large parts.
3. Accumulation StageMetal accumulates at the inner gate front, building “momentum” for high-speed filling.- Ensures a steady metal supply to avoid gaps during the next stage.– Velocità: 0.3–0.5m/s- Pressione: 5–10MPa (maintains flow without splashing)Ideal for parts with thin walls (≤3mm); ensures uniform metal distribution.
4. Filling StagePunch accelerates to high speed (2–5m/s) to fill the mold cavity quickly.- Chiave: Fill before the metal solidifies (typical filling time: 0.05–0.2s for small parts).– Velocità: 2–5m/s (varies by part thickness; faster for thinner walls)- Accelerazione: ≤5m/s² (avoids turbulence)All high-volume production; critical for complex parts with deep cavities.
5. Boosting & Holding StageApply high pressure (50–100MPa) via the booster mechanism to compact molten metal.- Maintain pressure during solidification (tempo di trattenimento: 10–20s) to eliminate shrinkage.– Aumenta la pressione: 50–100MPa- Holding time: 1.2× solidification timePressure-bearing parts (PER ESEMPIO., valvole idrauliche); prevents sink defects.
2. 3-Stage Division (Classic Simplified)1. Slow Injection StageCombines “slow sealing” and “accumulation” stages: Low speed (0.1–0.5m/s) pushes metal over the gate, expels air, and builds momentum.- Simplified for easy operation—reduces parameter setup time.– Velocità: 0.1–0.5m/s- Pressione: 5–15MPaSmall to medium-sized parts (PER ESEMPIO., 3C electronic components); used on older machines with limited parameter controls.
2. Fast Injection StageSame as 5-stage “filling stage”: Ad alta velocità (2–5m/s) fills the cavity quickly.- Focus on cycle efficiency—common in high-volume production (PER ESEMPIO., hardware in lega di zinco).– Velocità: 2–5m/s- Tempo di riempimento: <0.2S (per parti <500G)Zinc alloy parts (hot chamber machines); fast-cycle products (PER ESEMPIO., bathroom faucet handles).
3. Boosting StageMerges “boosting” and “holding” stages: Apply high pressure (50–80MPa) and hold until solidification.- Simplified for operators to monitor—reduces human error.– Pressione: 50–80MPa- Holding time: 8–15sParti non critiche (PER ESEMPIO., toy casings); low-skill production lines.
3. 4-Stage Division (Modern Machines)1. Slow Pressure Injection StageIdentical to 5-stage “slow sealing stage”: Low speed (0.1–0.3m/s) seals the port and expels air.- Adds real-time pressure monitoring to avoid metal leakage.– Velocità: 0.1–0.3m/s- Pressione: 5–10MPa (monitored via sensors)Modern cold chamber machines; parts requiring strict air control (PER ESEMPIO., Alloggi per batterie EV).
2. Fast Injection StageSame as 5-stage “filling stage”: Ad alta velocità (2–6m/s) fills complex cavities.- Uses variable speed curves (PER ESEMPIO., J-shaped acceleration) per ridurre la turbolenza.– Velocità: 2–6m/s- Accelerazione: 3–5m/s² (smooth ramp-up)Complex aluminum parts (PER ESEMPIO., supporti per motori automobilistici); machines with AI parameter control.
3. Deceleration StageUnique to modern machines: Slow the punch (from 2–6m/s to 0.5–1m/s) as filling nears completion.- Reduces impact on the mold (estendendo la vita della muffa) and minimizes flash (excess metal at parting lines).Deceleration rate: 2–4m/s²- End speed: 0.5–1m/sParti ad alta precisione (PER ESEMPIO., componenti del dispositivo medico); molds with tight tolerances (± 0,05 mm).
4. Pressure Holding StageFocus on uniform pressure application: Maintain 50–100MPa until the part’s surface solidifies.- Adds cooling channel synchronization (adjusts water flow to match solidification).– Pressione: 50–100MPa- Holding time: 10–25s (varies by wall thickness)Safety-critical parts (PER ESEMPIO., automotive steering knuckles); parts requiring high density (≥99,5%).

3. Key Parameter Tuning: Optimize Each Stage for Defect Prevention

Even with the right stage division, poor parameter settings lead to defects. Below is a guide to tuning critical parameters for common alloys and defect risks:

UN. Parameter Benchmarks by Alloy

Tipo di legaSlow Stage SpeedFast Stage SpeedBoost PressureHolding Time (10mm Thick Part)
Alluminio (Camera fredda)0.1–0.3m/s2–5m/s50–100MPa12–18s
Zinco (Camera calda)0.2–0.4m/s1–3m/s30–50MPa8–12s
Magnesio (Camera fredda)0.1–0.2m/s3–6m/s60–90MPa10–15s

B. Defect-Specific Parameter Adjustments

If you’re facing common issues (PER ESEMPIO., bolle, chiusure fredde), tweak stages as follows:

DifettoCausa ultima (Stage Issue)Parameter Fix
Bubbles/ PorosityFast stage too fast (turbolenza); slow stage didn’t expel air.Reduce fast stage speed by 0.5–1m/s.- Extend slow stage travel by 20–30mm (expels more air).
Chiuse freddeFast stage too slow (metal solidifies mid-fill); slow stage too long.Increase fast stage speed by 0.3–0.8m/s.- Shorten slow stage time by 0.5–1s.
Shrinkage SinksBoost pressure too low; holding time too short.Increase boost pressure by 10–20MPa.- Extend holding time by 2–5s (1.2× solidification time).
FlashDeceleration stage missing; fast stage too fast (excess metal squeezed into gaps).Add a deceleration stage (0.5–1m/s end speed).- Reduce fast stage speed by 0.5–1m/s.

4. How to Choose the Right Stage Classification

Selecting the best stage division depends on three factors: equipment capability, in parte complessità, e volume di produzione. Follow this decision tree:

  1. Equipment Age/Type:
  • Older machines (pre-2010) with limited parameter controls: Use 3-stage division (simplified, facile da usare).
  • Modern machines (post-2010) with AI and sensor integration: Use 4-stage division (leverages deceleration and real-time monitoring).
  • Training or lab environments: Use 5-stage division (teaches core principles).
  1. In parte complessità:
  • Parti semplici (PER ESEMPIO., parentene piane): 3-stage division (no need for deceleration).
  • Parti complesse (PER ESEMPIO., EV battery housings with thin walls): 4-stage division (deceleration prevents flash).
  • Parti critiche (PER ESEMPIO., componenti aerospaziali): 5-stage division (granular control reduces defects).
  1. Volume di produzione:
  • Volume elevato (>100k parts/year): 3 or 4-stage (configurazione rapida, low operator input).
  • Low volume (<10k parts/year): 5-stage (flexible tuning for small batches).

5. Yigu Technology’s Perspective on Staged Injection

Alla tecnologia Yigu, we see staged injection as the “brain” of die casting—poorly tuned stages undo even the best mold designs. For automotive clients using cold chamber machines, our 4-stage AI-driven system (with real-time speed/pressure adjustment) reduced defect rates from 7% A <1.8%, cutting scrap costs by $40,000/year for a 100k-part batch. For zinc alloy hardware clients, our simplified 3-stage setup (pre-set parameters for common parts) reduced operator training time by 50%.

Stiamo portando avanti due innovazioni chiave: 1) Self-learning stage tuning (AI analyzes defect data to optimize speeds/pressures automatically); 2) Cross-alloy parameter libraries (pre-loaded settings for aluminum, zinco, and magnesium, Ridurre il tempo di configurazione di 70%). Our goal is to make staged injection accessible—turning complex parameters into intuitive, reliable controls that boost quality and efficiency for every client.

Domande frequenti

  1. Can I skip stages (PER ESEMPIO., deceleration) to speed up cycle time?

Skipping stages risks costly defects. Per esempio, skipping deceleration increases flash by 30–50% (requiring extra trimming time) and shortens mold life by 20% (due to excess impact). Invece, optimize existing stages: PER ESEMPIO., reduce slow stage speed by 0.1m/s (cuts 0.3s/cycle) without sacrificing air expulsion.

  1. Do hot chamber machines use the same stage classifications as cold chamber?

Hot chamber machines (for zinc/magnesium) often use simplified 3-stage division—they have shorter pressure chambers (less air to expel), so the 5-stage “accumulation” stage is unnecessary. Tuttavia, modern hot chamber machines (post-2015) can use 4-stage division for high-precision parts (PER ESEMPIO., componenti del dispositivo medico).

  1. How do I know if my stage parameters are optimized?

Use three tests: 1) Air detection: Check for bubbles via X-ray (porosity grade ≤2 per ASTM E446). 2) Fill test: Use a high-speed camera (1000fps) to confirm no splashing or turbulence. 3) Density test: Measure part density (≥99.2% for aluminum alloys). If all pass, your parameters are optimized.

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