CA1289341C - Method of making mold used in pressure slip casting - Google Patents

Method of making mold used in pressure slip casting

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Publication number
CA1289341C
CA1289341C CA000542929A CA542929A CA1289341C CA 1289341 C CA1289341 C CA 1289341C CA 000542929 A CA000542929 A CA 000542929A CA 542929 A CA542929 A CA 542929A CA 1289341 C CA1289341 C CA 1289341C
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CA
Canada
Prior art keywords
porous mold
upper case
holding members
mold
porous
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Fee Related
Application number
CA000542929A
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Haruyuki Ito
Akio Matsumoto
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Toto Ltd
Original Assignee
Toto Ltd
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Filing date
Publication date
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Publication of CA1289341C publication Critical patent/CA1289341C/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
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Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B28WORKING CEMENT, CLAY, OR STONE
    • B28BSHAPING CLAY OR OTHER CERAMIC COMPOSITIONS; SHAPING SLAG; SHAPING MIXTURES CONTAINING CEMENTITIOUS MATERIAL, e.g. PLASTER
    • B28B1/00Producing shaped prefabricated articles from the material
    • B28B1/26Producing shaped prefabricated articles from the material by slip-casting, i.e. by casting a suspension or dispersion of the material in a liquid-absorbent or porous mould, the liquid being allowed to soak into or pass through the walls of the mould; Moulds therefor ; specially for manufacturing articles starting from a ceramic slip; Moulds therefor
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B28WORKING CEMENT, CLAY, OR STONE
    • B28BSHAPING CLAY OR OTHER CERAMIC COMPOSITIONS; SHAPING SLAG; SHAPING MIXTURES CONTAINING CEMENTITIOUS MATERIAL, e.g. PLASTER
    • B28B1/00Producing shaped prefabricated articles from the material
    • B28B1/26Producing shaped prefabricated articles from the material by slip-casting, i.e. by casting a suspension or dispersion of the material in a liquid-absorbent or porous mould, the liquid being allowed to soak into or pass through the walls of the mould; Moulds therefor ; specially for manufacturing articles starting from a ceramic slip; Moulds therefor
    • B28B1/261Moulds therefor
    • B28B1/262Mould materials; Manufacture of moulds or parts thereof
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B29WORKING OF PLASTICS; WORKING OF SUBSTANCES IN A PLASTIC STATE IN GENERAL
    • B29CSHAPING OR JOINING OF PLASTICS; SHAPING OF MATERIAL IN A PLASTIC STATE, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; AFTER-TREATMENT OF THE SHAPED PRODUCTS, e.g. REPAIRING
    • B29C33/00Moulds or cores; Details thereof or accessories therefor
    • B29C33/0033Moulds or cores; Details thereof or accessories therefor constructed for making articles provided with holes
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B29WORKING OF PLASTICS; WORKING OF SUBSTANCES IN A PLASTIC STATE IN GENERAL
    • B29CSHAPING OR JOINING OF PLASTICS; SHAPING OF MATERIAL IN A PLASTIC STATE, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; AFTER-TREATMENT OF THE SHAPED PRODUCTS, e.g. REPAIRING
    • B29C33/00Moulds or cores; Details thereof or accessories therefor
    • B29C33/38Moulds or cores; Details thereof or accessories therefor characterised by the material or the manufacturing process
    • B29C33/3814Porous moulds
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S425/00Plastic article or earthenware shaping or treating: apparatus
    • Y10S425/033Magnet

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Ceramic Engineering (AREA)
  • Manufacturing & Machinery (AREA)
  • Dispersion Chemistry (AREA)
  • Producing Shaped Articles From Materials (AREA)
  • Moulds, Cores, Or Mandrels (AREA)
  • Casting Or Compression Moulding Of Plastics Or The Like (AREA)
  • Moulds For Moulding Plastics Or The Like (AREA)

Abstract

ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE
Herein disclosed is a method of making a porous mold by using an upper case which bears lines for forming channels for water and air communications. The method of making a porous mold, comprises the steps of:
attaching holding members in an array at a desired interval to an upper case made of a rigid material such that they project a predetermined distance from the inner surface of said upper case; removably attaching flexible lines to said holding members; passing at least one end of each of said flexible lines through said upper case to the outside of said upper case;
casting slurry into a molding cavity which is defined by said upper case and a base jointed to the former case to form a porous mold; removing said upper case together with said holding members from the porous mold after said slurry has cured so that said holding members are disengaged from said flexible lines to leave the latter in said porous mold; filling up the holes, which are left in the porous mold at the traces of said holding members, with a resin; and pulling said flexible lines out of the porous mold to form channels in said porous mold after said resin has cured.

Description

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S P E C I F I C ~ T I O N

TITLE OF THE INVENTION
Method of Making Mold Used in Pressure Slip Casting BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Field of the Invention -The present invention relates to a method of making a porous mold used in pressure slip casting ceramic articles.
Description of the Prior Art For making most ceramic articles having large size and complicated shape, there has been adopted for long a non-pressurized slip casting process using a gypsum mold. In the slip casting process, however, water is absorbed from slip into the mold by its capillary action so that the casting rate cannot be improved drastically. When the gypsum mold is saturated with the water, its capillary action is so weakened that the mold has to be dried up for a long time after every its one or two uses.
Therefore, a pressure casting process has recently been developed to eliminate these defects and to ~ .

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drastically improve the productivity, In this pressure casting process, the slip is cast under a pressure of several to 30 Kg/cm2 into a space between two mold parts, i.e., a mold cavity. The porous mold is made by filling up a space between a reinforcing, pressure-resisting iron container or a case and a base with a porous mold forming slurry or powder (e.g., a mixture of an epoxy resin and sand) and by curing the slurry or powder to form a structure integratal with the reinforcing iron container or box.
According to this structure, it is remarkably difficult to make the strong pressure-resisting container or reinforcing iron box identical in shape to the product or article to be cast. Due to this difficulty, the porous layer will have the locally large thickness.
The excessive thickness of the porous layer will result in an increase or the elastic compression strain due to the slip pressure during the pressure casting to make the corners of the porous layer liable to be cracked. When the cast product is to be removed from the mold, moreover, there arises another defect that the reaction of the compression strain causes the porous layer to bite the product, thus making the removing or demolding difficulto On the other hand, :

the pressure casting process is required to have not only drain passages for spurting the water which has been forced during the casting into the porous mold but also compressed air passages for injecting air and water into the molding surface through the porous mold when the product is to be removed from the mold. In case the mold is constructed of two upper and lower parts, for example, the upper part of the mold has to be evacuated during removal of the product from the lower mold part, so that the product may be attracted to the upper mold part but not drop. For this purpose, the air passages are also indispensable. These passages may be commonly shared and should have their interval and spacing from the molding surface to effect even injections of the water and air thereby to raise no trouble during the demolding. A variety of processes for forming such water and air passages have been proposed but encountered with difficulties in their manufacture and use.
According to one of the processes of the prior art, more specifically, a porous mold having the water and air passages is made by forming a wire mesh into a cage held at a desired spacing from the molding surface, by fixing at an appropriate interval either porous tubes or tubular members made of coils covered with cloth, by fixing the cage to a pressure-resisting container at a desired spacing from the molding surface, by jointing the pressure-resisting container to a base case to form a molding cavity, and by casting and curing a porous layer forming slurry in the molding cavity. This process is defective in that the cage has to be formed for each mold, in that the cage of wire mesh is difficult to have an accurate shape and to arrange the water passages accurately in the porous layer, and in that it is troublesome to make the tubular members to be attached to the cage. Because the water and air passages according to this process are difficult to have a small diameter, the vacant portion is enlarged at the intersections, if any, of the passages to raise problems in the strength of the mold and in the spacing from the molding surface, thus inviting another defect that the passages cannot be freely intersected.
According to another process proposed (in Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 8010 / 1985), flexible or rigid lines are fixed directly in a reinforcing iron box, and this iron box is jointed to a base to form a mold cavity. A porous layer forming slurry is cast and cured in the mold cavity. After the slurry has cured, the lines are extracted to form draining passages.

, According to this process, however, the iron box cannot be identical in shape to the product or article to be formed. As a result, there arises a defect that the water and air passages cannot be formed while having their spacing from the molding surface and their interval selected, as desired.
According to still another process proposed, grooves are formed in the rear surface of a porous mold formed in advance by means of a tool and are covered with tapes carrying an adhesive to form the water and air passages. This process is followed by defects that the dimensional accuracy of the grooves is not achieved and that because of the manual works of adhering the tapes with adhesive to the grooves, the fingers of the workers will be poisoned with the adhesive. Another defect is that the compressed air will leak from the adhered portions, when the mold is used, to break the mold.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is, therefore, an object of the present invention to provide a method of making a mold which is freed from the above-specified defects of the prior art and which is easy to make and suitable for use.
According to a first feature of the present ' -invention, there is provided a method of making a porous mold, comprisi.ng the steps of: attaching holding members in an array at a desired interval to an upper case made of a rigid material such that they project a predetermined distance from the inner surface of said upper case; removably attaching flexible lines to said holding members; passing at least one end of each of said flexible lines through said upper case to the outside of said upper case; casting slurry into a molding cavity which is defined by said upper case and a base jointed to the former case to form a porous mold; removing said upper case together with said holding members from the porous mold after said slurry has cured so that said holding members are disengaged from said flexible lines to leave the latter in said porous mold; filling up the holes, which are left in the porous mold at the traces of said holding members, with a resin; and pulling said flexible lines out of the porous mold to form channels in said porous mold after said resin has cured.
According to a second feature of the present invention, there is provided a method of making a porous mold, comprising the steps of: attaching holding members to an upper case by means of magnets fixed in the inner surface of said upper case at a desired ~2~39;~

interval; fixing said flexible lines to said holding members with at least one end of each of said flexible lines extended to the outside of said upper case;
jointing said upper case to a base to form a molding cavity therebetween; casting slurry into said molding cavity to form a porous mold ; removing said upper case from said porous mold, after said slurry has cured, to leave said holding members together with said flexible lines in the cured porous mold; extracting said holding members from said porous mold to leave holes; filling up said holes with a resin; and extracting said flexible lines from said porous mold, after said resin has cured, to form channels.
According to a third feature of the present invention, there is provided a method of making a porous mold, comprising the steps of: forming a recess in at least a portion of the inner surface of an upper case made of a rigid material.; removably fitting a soft rubber member in said recess in a plane flush with the inner surface of said upper case; attaching holding members at a desired interval and in an array to the inner surface of said soft rubber member and the remaining portion of the inner surface of said upper case such that said holding members project a predetermined distance; removably fixing flexible lines ~ 2~

in said ho~.ding members with at least one end of said flexible lines extended through said upper case to the outside of the latter; jointing said upper case to a base to form a molding cavity therebetween; casting slurry in said molding cavity to form a porous mold;
removing said upper case together with its holding members from the porous mold, after said slurry has cured, to leave said soft rubber member on said porous mold; removing said soft rubber member together with its holding members from said porous mold to leave holes at the traces of said holding members; filling Up said holes with a resin; and extracting said flexible lines from said porous mold, after said resin has cured, to form channels in said porous mold.
According to a fourth feature of the present invention, there is provided a method of making a porous mold, comprising the steps of: attaching rigid lines in an extractable manner to an upper case at a desired interval; attaching at least one flexible line to said upper case so as to intersect said rigid lines and to have at least its one end extended to the outside through said upper case; jointing said upper case to a base to form a molding cavity therebetween;
casting slurry into said molding cavity to form a porous mold; extracting said rigid lines and said 4~

flexible line from said upper case after said slurry has cured; and removing said upper case from said porous mold to form channels in said porous mold.
The channels of the porous mold thus made by the foregoing four processes are used to drain the filtrate to the outside of the mold during the pressure slip casting process, and to introduce through the porous mold the water and air evenly onto the molding surface when the cast product is to be released from the mold.
If the mold is constructed of upper and lower parts, for example, the product cannot be removed simultaneously from the upper and lowre mold parts.
The channels are used to evacuate the porous layer of the mold, too. Then, the evacuation causes the product to attract to the upper mold part, and compressed air is blown into the lower mold part to allow it to be released from the product. Next, the upper part is supplied with the compressed air so that the product may be released or removed from the upper part.
For these operations, the channels are composed of one or more trunk channels communicating with the outside of the mold and a plurality of branch channels which intersect and communicate with the trunk channel at one or more points. The trunk and branch channels are arranged in the mold at a desired interval and at a _ g _ , ~28~34~

desired spacing from the molding surface. This makes it necessary to close the two ends of each of the branch passages.
In case a large-sized and complicated product is to be demolded, on the other hand, this demolding may be locally liable or reluctant to occur. This may make it necessary to change the pressure of the compressed air to be blown into the mold locally for the smooth demolding operation. If all the channels of the mold in its entirety have communications, the amount of water in the mold may become so partial as to adversely affect the demolding of the product or to locally soften the demolded product. This may make it necessary to divide the channels in the mold into independent blocks so that the water content in the mold may be controlled. According to the present invention, therefore, the channels in the porous mold may desirably be so independent of one another as to have no communication but each have a trunk channel for providing communication to the outside of the mold.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from the following description taken with reference to the "

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accompanying drawings, in which:
Fig. 1 shows in section a porous mold made by one of the processes of the present invention;
Fig. 2 is a schematic view of channels formed in the porous mold;
Fig. 3 is a perspective view of an upper case to be used in the method according to the first feature of the present invention;
Fig. 4 is a section showing the state in which the upper case is jointed to a base to form a mold cavity therebetween for casting slurry;
Fig. 5 shows in section a portion of the upper case with a holding member for attaching a flexible line to the upper case;
Fig. 6 shows in section the base and the porous mold with the upper case being removed;
Fig. 7 shows in section the porous mold in the state in which holes at the traces of the holding members are filled up with a resin;
Fig. 8 shows in section the porous mold from which the flexible lines have been extracted;
Fig. 9 is a perspective view of an upper case to be used in the method according to the second feature of the present invention;
Fig. 10 is similar to Fig. 4 except for that the - ' , :
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upper case of Fig. 9 is used;
Fig. 11 shows in section the upper case and holding members for attaching flexible lines to the upper case;
Fig. 12 is a top plan and a front elevation of one of the holding members;
Fig. 13 is similar to Fig. 10 except for that the upper case is removed;
Fig. 14 shows in section the porous mold in which holes at the traces of the holding members are filled up with a resin;
Fig. 15 shows in section the porous mold from which the flexible lines have been extracted;
Fig. 16 is similar to Figs. 4 and 10 but shows the state in which a porous mold is being made by a method according to the third feature of the present invention;
Fig. 17 is similar to Fig. 16 but shows an upper case and a soft rubber member in an enlarged scale;
Fig. 18 is a top plan view and a front elevation of a holding member to be used with the soft rubber member;
Fig. 19 is similar to Fig. 16 but shows the state in which the upper case is being removed;
Fig. 20 shows in section a portion of the porous mold from which the soft rubber member is being remo~ed;
Fig. 21 shows in section the porous mold in which holes at the traces of the holding members are filled up with a resin;
Fig. 22 shows in section the porous mold from which flexible lines have been extracted;
Fig. 23 is a perspective view of an upper case to be used in a method according to the fourth feature of the present invention;
Fig. 24 shows in section the state in which the porous mold is being made by the use of the upper case of Fig. 23;
Fig. 25 is similar to Fig. 24 with the lines being extracted;
Fig. 26 is a perspective view of the relations between a rigid line and the flexible lines;
Fig. 27 shows in section a portion of the porous mold;
Fig. 28 is a perspective view of a porous mold in which the ends of the branch channels are closed with a resin; and Fig. 29 shows in section the state in which a plurality of channels in a porous mold are independent of one another and have no communication with one another.

DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
The present invention will be described in detail in the following with reference to the accompanying drawings.
Fig. 1 is a section showing a porous mold which is made by the method of the present invention. The porous mold 1 is formed therein with a number of passages such as channels 2 for water and air communications. The channels 2 are composed of inter-secting trunk and branch channels 2a and 2b, as shematically shown in Fig. 2.
Fig. 3 shows an upper case 3 which is to be used for making a generally flat porous mold by the method of the present invention. This upper case 3 is made of a rigid material such as an FRP. To the upper case 3, there are attached through holding members 4 a number of flexible lines 5 which are arranged generally horizontally at a predetermined interval. Reference numeral 5a denotes flexible lines for the branch channels, which are intersected by a flexible line 5b for the trunk channel. All of these flexible lines 5 have their ends extending to the outside of the upper case 3 so that they may be extracted out of the porous mold 1 after this mold 1 has cured. The flexible lines 5 may preferably be formed into a rod or tube shape havlng a circular or elliptical section and made of an elastic and strong material such as silicone or polyethylene rubber. The lines 5 may desirably have a diameter of 1 to 5 mm.
As best seen from Fig. 5, the holding members 4 for the flexible lines S are fixed directly to the upper case 3 at a predetermined interval and array according to the array of the flexible lines 5 and projected a predetermined length from the inner face of the upper case 3. Each of the holding members 4 is formed at its leading end with a dent 6 for removably fixing therein the corresponding one of the flexible lines 5 when the latter is press-fitted.
Thus, as shown in Fig. 4, the upper case 3 carrying the flexible lines 5 is jointed to a base 7 to form a mold cavity inbetween, and slurry 9 is poured from a pouring port 8 of the upper case 3 to cast a porous mold.
After the slurry 9 poured has cured, the upper case 3 is removed to leave the porous mold 1 on the base 7 (as shown in Fig. 6). The holding members 4 are disengaged from the flexible lines 5 and pulled up together with the upper case 3 to leave the the ~ ?a~

flexible lines 5 in the porous mold 1. Holes 11 are formed in the traces of the holding members 4 in the rear surface of the porous mold 1 (as shown in Fig. 6).
Next, the holes 11 are filled up with a resin 12, as shown in Fig. 7. This filling resin 12 may preferably be a putty-like adhesive having a low fluidity. After the filling resin 12 has cured, the flexible lines 5 are extracted from the porous mold 1 to leave the channels 2 in the porous mold 1 (as shown in Fig. 8).
The upper case 3 shown in Fig. 3 can be removed from the porous mold without the holding members 4 being caught by the porous mold. In case, however, the porous mold to be formed is shaped to have vertical and/or sloped faces in addition to the horizontal face, the upper case 3 cannot be removed from the porous mold unless the holding members 4 are removably attached to the upper case 3.
Fig. 9 shows the state in which the flexible lines 5 are arranged over the upper case 3 suited for making the porous mold shaped to have vertical and sloped faces in addition to the horizontal face. Like Fig. 3, the flexible lines 5 are composed of the flexible lines 5a for the branch channels and the intersecting flexible lines 5b for the trunk channels. As best seen from Fig. 11, in the upper case 3, there are fixedly ': " '; ' ' buried magnets 14 for releasably attract the holding members 4 through iron strings 15 which are buried in the lower faces of the holding members 4. Each of these holding members 4 is formed at its leading end with the dent 6 in which the corresponding one of the flexible lines 5 is press-fitted. Thus, as shown in Fig. 10, the upper case 3 carrying the flexible lines 5 is combined with the base 7, and the porous mold forming slurry 9 is cast in the mold cavity defined by the two cases 3 and 7.
After the porous mold forming slurry has cured, the upper case 3 is disengaged from the porous mold 1.
Then, the magnets 14 are removed from the holding members 4 to leave the holding members 4 in the porous mold (as shown in Fig. 13). After this, the holding members 4 are removed to leave the holes 11.
Next, these holes 11 are filled up with the resin 12 (as shown in Fig. 14). After this filling resin 12 has cured, the flexible lines 5 are extracted to leave the channels 2 in the porous mold (as shown in Fig.
15).
Turning now to Figs. 16 to 22, there is shown a modification of the method of making a porous mold which has vertical and sloped faces in addition to a horizontal face. In this modification, the portions for forming the vertical and sloped faces of the porous mold are made of soft rubber members 16, which are so removably fitted in recesses 17 formed in the upper case 3 as to coextend with the inner face of the case 3. These fittings may preferably be performed by the attractions between magnets 18 buried in the inner faces of the recesses 17 of the upper case 3 and iron strings 19 buried in the rear surfaces of the soft rubber members 16. The holding members 4 are fixedly buried at a predetermined interval and array in the inner faces of the soft rubber members 16, and other holding members 4 are also fixed in parallel with those of the soft rubber members 16 in the inner face of the horizontal portion of the upper case 3. Like the foregoing embodiments, each of the holding members 4 is formed at its leading end with the dent 6 in which the corresponding one of the flexible lines 5 is press-fitted. The soft rubber members 16 may preferably be made of soft urethane rubber, for example.
In the modification described above, the soft rubber members are used only in the portions of the upper case for forming the vertical and sloped faces.
However, the upper case may be made of soft rubber as a whole and so attached by magnet attaching means that its shape may be held by a rigid backing material.

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Thus, as shown in Fig. 16, the rigid upper case 3 carrying the soft rubber members 16 and the flexible lines 5 is jointed to the base 7, and the porous mold forming slurry 9 is cast into the mold cavity between the two cases 3 and 7. After the slurry 9 has cured, the upper case 3 is removed (as shown in Fig. 19).
Then, the magnets 13 of the upper case 3 are disengaged from the buried iron strings 19 of the soft rubber members 16 to leave the soft rubber members 16 around the porous mold 1. At this time, the holding members 4 fixed on the upper case 3 are removed from the porous mold 1 simultaneously with the removal of the upper case 3. Next, the soft rubber members 16 are peeled off from the porous mold 1 (as shown in Fig. 20).
Then, the holes 11 are formed in the porous mold 1 at the traces of the holding members 4 of the flexible lines 5 and are then filled up with the resin 12 (as shown in Fig. 21). After the filling resin 12 has cured, the flexible lines 5 are extracted to form the channels 2 in the porous mold 1 (as shown in Fig. 22).
Figs. 23 to 27 show still another embodiment of the present invention, in which rigid lines are used as those for forming the branch channels whereas a flexible line is used as that for forming the trunk channel having communication with the outside of the ' ' ' ~ ' : ' . ' ~' .

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mold.
As shown in Fig. 23, the rigid lines 20 are made of stainless steel, for example, and have a diameter of 1 to 5 mm, preferably 2 to 4 mm. The upper case 3 is formed in its opposite side walls with insert holes 21 for allowing the rigid lines 20 to be inserted there-through. The flexible line 22 is attached to the upper case 3 across the rigid lines 20 and has its end extending to the outside through the upper case 3.
The upper case 3 and the base 7 are jointed to each other, and the porous mold forming slurry 9 is cast into the mold cavity inbetween (as shown in Fig.
24). Next, the rigid lines 20 and the flexible line 22 are extracted from the porous mold and the upper case 3 (as shown in Fig. 25) after the slurry has cured.
After this, the upper case 3 is removed from the porous mold 1. Thus, as shown in Fig. 27, there can be attained the porous mold 1 which is formed with the inrersecting trunk and branch channels 2a and 2b. In order that communications may be ensured at the inter-sections between the trunk channel 2a and the branch channels 2b, the rigid lines 20 and the flexible line 22 may preferably be connected at their intersections by means of rings 23 (as shown in Fig. 26).
Fig. 28 is a perspective view showing a porous `' ' . ': ' -, mold 1. In the shown state, the holes, from which theflexible line holding members have been removed, are filled up with the resin 12 on the opposite face 25 of the porous mold 1 opposite to a molding surface 24, and the ends of the trunk channel 2a for providing communication with the outside and the branch channels 2b are closed with a resin 26 on the side faces of the porous mold.
Fig. 29 is a section showing a rectangular porous mold 1. In the shown state, a lower portion 27 and side portions 28a and 28b have channels which are made so independent of one another as to have no communication. Reference numerals 25, 2a and 2b denote the molding surface of the mold, the trunk channels and the branch channels, respectively. Numeral 29 denotes a portion of a pipe for providing communications between the trunk channels 2a and the outside of the mold.
As has been described hereinbefore, according to the method of the present invention, when a pressure casing porous mold is to be made, the upper case bearing the lines for forming the channels for water and air communications in the porous mold is used so that the spacing from the molding surface of the mold from the channels and the interval and diameter of the 34~

channels can be accurately controlled to substantially eliminate the defects concomitant with the prior art.
Without any veteran skill, moreover, the lines can be attached remarkably promptly and simply in a predetermined array to the upper case so that the operating efficiency can be drastically improved.

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Claims (13)

1. A method of making a porous mold, comprising the steps of:
attaching holding members in an array at a desired interval to an upper case made of a rigid material such that they project a predetermined distance from the inner surface of said upper case;
removably attaching flexible lines to said holding members;
passing at least one end of each of said flexible lines through said upper case to the outside of said upper case;
casting slurry into a molding cavity which is defined by said upper case and a base jointed to the former case to form a porous mold;
removing said upper case together with said holding members from the porous mold after said slurry has cured so that said holding members are disengaged from said flexible lines to leave the latter in said porous mold; filling up the holes, which are left in the porous mold at the traces of said holding members, with a resin; and pulling said flexible lines out of the porous mold to form channels in said porous mold after said resin has cured.
2. A porous mold making method according to Claim 1, wherein said flexible lines are made of elastic and strong rods or tubes having a circular or elliptical section of a diameter of 1 to 5 mm.
3. A porous mold making method according to Claim 2, wherein said rods or tubes are made of silicone or polyethylene rubber.
4. A porous mold making method according to Claim 3, wherein said resin is made of a putty-like adhesive having little fluidity.
5. A method of making a porous mold, comprising the steps of:
attaching holding members to an upper case by means of magnets fixed in the inner surface of said upper case at a desired interval;
fixing said flexible lines to said holding members with at least one end of each of said flexible lines extended to the outside of said upper case;
jointing said upper case to a base to form a molding cavity therebetween;

casting slurry into said molding cavity to form a porous mold;
removing said upper case from said porous mold, after said slurry has cured, to leave said holding members together with said flexible lines in the cured porous mold;
extracting said holding members from said porous mold to leave holes; filling up said holes with a resin; and extracting said flexible lines from said porous mold, after said resin has cured, to form channels.
6. A method of making a porous mold, comprising the steps of:
forming a recess in at least a portion of the inner surface of an upper case made of a rigid material;
removably fitting a soft rubber member in said recess in a plane flush with the inner surface of said upper case;
attaching holding members at a desired interval and in an array to the inner surface of said soft rubber member and the remaining portion of the inner surface of said upper case such that said holding members project a predetermined distance;

removably fixing flexible lines in said holding members with at least one end of said flexible lines extended through said upper case to the outside of the latter;
jointing said upper case to a base to form a molding cavity therebetween;
casting slurry in said molding cavity to form a porous mold;
removing said upper case together with its holding members from the porous mold, after said slurry has cured, to leave said soft rubber member on said porous mold;
removing said soft rubber member together with its holding members from said porous mold to leave holes at the traces of said holding members;
filling up said holes with a resin; and extracting said flexible lines from said porous mold, after said resin has cured, to form channels in said porous mold.
7. A porous mold making method according to Claim 6, wherein said soft rubber member is made of soft urethane rubber.
8. A porous mold making method according to Claim 6, wherein said soft rubber member is formed into a case which is backed up by a rigid backing member through magnet means.
9. A method of making a porous mold, comprising the steps of:
attaching rigid lines in an extractable manner to an upper case at a desired interval;
attaching at least one flexible line to said upper case so as to intersect said rigid lines and to have at least its one end extended to the outside through said upper case;
jointing said upper case to a base to form a molding cavity therebetween;
casting slurry into said molding cavity to form a porous mold;
extracting said rigid lines and said flexible line from said upper case after said slurry has cured; and removing said upper case from said porous mold to form channels in said porous mold.
10. A porous mold making method according to Claim 9, wherein said rigid lines are made of stainless steel rods having a diameter of 1 to 5 mm.
11. A porous mold making method according to Claim 10, wherein said rigid lines and said flexible line are interconnected at their intersections by means of rings.
12. A porous mold making method according to any of the Claims 1, 5, 6 and 9, wherein said channels are composed of at least one trunk channel for providing communication between the inside and outside of said porous mold, and a plurality of branch channels intersecting and communicating with said trunk channel and having their open ends closed.
13. A porous mold making method according to Claim 12, wherein said channels are independent of one another and have no communication thereamong but communicate trunk channels, respectively.
CA000542929A 1986-07-26 1987-07-24 Method of making mold used in pressure slip casting Expired - Fee Related CA1289341C (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

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JP61176371A JPS6331711A (en) 1986-07-26 1986-07-26 Manufacture of pottery pressure casting molding die
JP176371/1986 1986-07-26

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US (1) US4844853A (en)
JP (1) JPS6331711A (en)
KR (1) KR900001535B1 (en)
CA (1) CA1289341C (en)
DE (1) DE3724591A1 (en)
FR (2) FR2601898B1 (en)
GB (1) GB2194912B (en)
IT (1) IT1222131B (en)
SE (1) SE468421B (en)

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Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
JPS6331711A (en) 1988-02-10
DE3724591A1 (en) 1988-02-04
KR880001387A (en) 1988-04-23
JPH0217328B2 (en) 1990-04-20
SE8702962D0 (en) 1987-07-24
FR2601898B1 (en) 1992-02-14
US4844853A (en) 1989-07-04
SE468421B (en) 1993-01-18
FR2606324B1 (en) 1991-05-24
GB2194912A (en) 1988-03-23
KR900001535B1 (en) 1990-03-12
IT8721443A0 (en) 1987-07-24
FR2601898A1 (en) 1988-01-29
DE3724591C2 (en) 1992-06-25
FR2606324A1 (en) 1988-05-13
IT1222131B (en) 1990-09-05
GB8717759D0 (en) 1987-09-03
GB2194912B (en) 1989-12-13
SE8702962L (en) 1988-01-27

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