US20040221931A1 - Aluminum cast -forged product and method for manufacturing aluminum cast-forged product - Google Patents
Aluminum cast -forged product and method for manufacturing aluminum cast-forged product Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- US20040221931A1 US20040221931A1 US10/235,995 US23599502A US2004221931A1 US 20040221931 A1 US20040221931 A1 US 20040221931A1 US 23599502 A US23599502 A US 23599502A US 2004221931 A1 US2004221931 A1 US 2004221931A1
- Authority
- US
- United States
- Prior art keywords
- forging
- forged product
- forged
- manufacturing
- aluminum cast
- 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.)
- Abandoned
Links
Images
Classifications
-
- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B21—MECHANICAL METAL-WORKING WITHOUT ESSENTIALLY REMOVING MATERIAL; PUNCHING METAL
- B21J—FORGING; HAMMERING; PRESSING METAL; RIVETING; FORGE FURNACES
- B21J5/00—Methods for forging, hammering, or pressing; Special equipment or accessories therefor
- B21J5/002—Hybrid process, e.g. forging following casting
-
- B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
- B21—MECHANICAL METAL-WORKING WITHOUT ESSENTIALLY REMOVING MATERIAL; PUNCHING METAL
- B21J—FORGING; HAMMERING; PRESSING METAL; RIVETING; FORGE FURNACES
- B21J5/00—Methods for forging, hammering, or pressing; Special equipment or accessories therefor
Definitions
- the present invention relates to a method for manufacturing an aluminum cast-forged product in which forging is performed at a forging temperature higher than a general forging temperature of an aluminum alloy in a forging process to improve mechanical properties.
- weight reduction techniques of an automobile are considered to be the most significant. It is because an automobile having reduced weight causes reduced load on a power source to allow reduction in fuel consumption of not only a gasoline engine but also of any power source.
- a most approachable weight reduction technique is to change a material to be used to a weight reduction material. Typically, using an aluminum alloy material, many automobile parts such as an engine cylinder head or an engine cylinder block have been manufactured and used.
- cast products are easy to manufacture, but there is a limit of improvement in mechanical strength.
- it is difficult to use the cast products for automobile parts such as suspension parts that need to be less corrosive, have a sufficient strength and a good extending property, and have fewer defects, and that significantly relate to safety.
- forged products or squeeze cast products low speed injection molded products
- the forged products or the squeeze cast products have a problem to be solved of high cost, and applications thereof are extremely limited.
- the reasons why an aluminum forged product that uses a conventional A6061 alloy or the like and is preferably used for the suspension part for the automobile is high in cost include that the forged material per se is high in cost, and that the number of manufacturing steps is large. Further, for example, a squeeze cast product using an AC4CH alloy needs a large number of manufacturing steps and is low in injection speed, thus preventing an increase in productivity and cost reduction.
- the theme of the present invention is to provide a manufacturing method capable of reducing costs by using a casting and forging method and of producing an aluminum cast-forged product having improved mechanical properties compared to a conventional forging method.
- the present invention has an object to provide an aluminum cast-forged product that has high tensile strength, high proof stress, and high elongation, and good mechanical properties, and is low in cost, using the manufacturing method capable of using recycled materials as a starting material and omitting processes.
- a manufacturing method by casting and forging (hereinafter also referred to as a casting and forging method) in which a material for forging is melted, and cast to obtain a preform made of a material for forging; then the preform made of a material for forging is forged.
- This casting-forging method may offer the following advantages, compared to a general forging method in which a material for forging such as of a wrought material in the form of a round bar is bought, cut into a length according to a metal product to be produced, and then, for example, forged with a die.
- unnecessary materials including flash generated in a forging process can be repeatedly used as a starting material for a material for forging to be melted.
- flash that is not used for producing a product accounts for at least approximately 30% of a starting material before the die forging. That is, at most approximately 70% of the forged material is used for producing a product, causing a big waste. This waste can be saved.
- the preform made of a material for forging obtained by casting can be formed into a shape to match a final product such that strength is increased by later forging but the forging process can be simplified.
- the conventional forging method requires a step of cutting the material for forging in the form of the round bar into the length according to the final product, and depending on shapes of the final product, requires a step of bending the material for forging or a step of coarse forging before rough forging, but these steps can be omitted.
- a method for manufacturing an aluminum cast-forged product which includes a step of casting a material for forging of an aluminum alloy to obtain a preform made of a material for forging, and a step of forging the preform made of a material for forging to obtain an aluminum cast-forged product, wherein the step of forging includes a step of heating the preform made of a material for forging at a temperature of from approximately 450° C. to a melting point of the alloy.
- a method for manufacturing an aluminum cast-forged product which includes step of casting a material for forging of an aluminum alloy to obtain a preform made of a material for forging, a step of forging that includes a plural steps of forging the preform made of a material for forging to obtain an aluminum cast-forged product, wherein a first step of forging in the plural steps of forging is a step of forging the preform made of a material for forging by heating the preform made of a material for forging at a temperature of from approximately 450° C. to a melting point of the alloy.
- the step of forging includes a step of rough forging and a step of finish forging. It is preferable to carry out a step of rough forging by heating the preform made of a material for forging at a temperature of from approximately 450° C. to a melting point of the alloy.
- the step of rough forging is preferably performed by heating the preform made of a material for forging at a temperature higher than a temperature in the step of finish forging.
- the aluminum alloy preferably contains 0.2 to 2.5% by mass of silicon
- the material for forging is preferably an aluminum alloy containing 0.4 to 0.8% by mass of silicon, 0.8 to 1.2% by mass of magnesium, 0.15 to 0.4% by mass of copper, and 0.04 to 0.35% by mass of chromium.
- the aluminum alloy is one consisting essentially of 0.2 to 2. 5% by mass of silicon
- the material for forging is preferably an aluminum alloy containing 0.4 to 0.8% by mass of silicon, 0.8 to 1.2% by mass of magnesium, 0.15 to 0.4% by mass of copper, and 0.04 to 0.35% by mass of chromium.
- a vehicle suspension part manufactured by the above-described method for manufacturing an aluminum cast-forged product.
- FIG. 1 shows a block flow chart of an embodiment of a method for manufacturing an aluminum cast-forged product according to the present invention.
- FIG. 2 shows an embodiment of an aluminum cast-forged product according to the present invention, and is a side view of a vehicle suspension part.
- the present invention relates to a method for manufacturing an aluminum cast-forged product obtained by forging a preform made of a material for forging obtained by casting a material for forging of an aluminum alloy.
- unnecessary flash generated in forging can be included as a starting material, melted and cast.
- No limit is placed on a shape of the preform made of a material for forging, and the preform made of a material for forging may be in the form of a round bar.
- the preform made of a material for forging may have a shape so as to provide a preferable forging ratio such that a final product obtains a strength increase effect by forging and a manufacturing process can be simplified.
- a feature of the present invention is that a forging process is performed with the preform made of a material for forging heated to a temperature between approximately 450° C. to a melting point.
- the forging process includes a rough forging step and a finish forging step, and rough forging is preferably performed with the preform made of a material for forging heated to a temperature between approximately 450° C. to a melting point.
- the finish forging after the rough forging is preferably performed at a temperature lower than the temperature in the rough forging, for example, a temperature between approximately 370 to 450° C. which are forging temperatures applied to a general aluminum alloy.
- Forging at a temperature higher than the conventional temperature allows the preform made of a material for forging to be in a thixotropic (semi-melted) condition, or allows Mg 2 Si to be in solid solution if the aluminum alloy contains silicon and magnesium, thus providing a product obtained by forging with mechanical properties equal to or higher than a product produced at the conventional forging temperature. Therefore, the method for manufacturing an aluminum cast-forged product according to the present invention can preferably produce a vehicle suspension part that is used in hostile environments and requires good mechanical properties, while reducing starting material costs and manufacturing costs.
- FIG. 1 shows a block diagram of an embodiment of a manufacturing process including the method for manufacturing an aluminum cast-forged product according to the present invention.
- the manufacturing process of the aluminum cast-forged product includes, for example, a melting step 11 of melting a material for forging 8 that is a starting material to obtain molten metal 3 , a casting step 14 of casting the molten metal 3 to obtain a cast preform made of a material for forging 6 , a rough forging step 16 and a finish forging step 20 of forging the preform made of a material for forging 6 to obtain a forged material 4 , and a trimming step 18 of trimming the forged material 4 to be a forged product.
- the material for forging 8 is an aluminum alloy containing 0.2 to 2.5% by mass of silicon. Taking Al—Mg—Si system heat treatment type aluminum alloy wrought material A6061 (hereinafter also simply referred to as an A6061 alloy) by the Japanese Industrial Standard H4140 as an example, the block diagram in FIG. 1 will be described from the start.
- the material for forging 8 is not limited to the A6061 alloy.
- the A6061 alloy contains, for example, 1.0% by mass of magnesium, 0.6% by mass of silicon, 0.25% by mass of copper, and 0.25% by mass of chromium in addition to aluminum as standard composition.
- the material for forging 8 may include unnecessary materials such as flash materials, flash receivers, or detectives, but in such as case, component analysis of the molten metal 3 obtained later by melting is preferably performed by emission spectrochemical analysis.
- the material for forging 8 is heated to be liquid metal, that is, the molten metal 3 .
- a fuel for heating may be any of liquid, solid, or gas.
- An electrical heating source such as electrical resistance, electrical induction, or an arc, or an electronic heating method such as laser or electronic beam may be used.
- a preferable melting furnace may be selected from furnaces of a crucible type, a channel type, a rotary type, or the like depending on heating methods.
- the aluminum alloy can be melted with its temperature kept at approximately 680 to 780° C. to obtain the molten metal 3 .
- the starting material includes unnecessary materials such as the flash materials, it is preferable to clean the obtained molten metal 3 for reducing impurities.
- the casting step 14 is a step of pouring the molten metal 3 into a mold, and after solidification, obtaining a cast product, that is, the preform made of a material for forging 6 as solid metal.
- a preform made of a material for forging 6 having a shape similar to a shape of the final product can be obtained depending on molds, and it is preferable to determine the shape of the preform made of a material for forging 6 in view of a balance between an improvement effect of mechanical properties by the later forging process and cost reduction by a simplified forging process.
- the low pressure die casting is a method in which molten metal 3 is charged into a mold by low pressure by pressuring the molten metal 3 into a molten metal container by gas pressure, or vacuuming the molten metal 3 from the mold, and casting to obtain a cast product. It is preferable to inspect the preform made of a material for forging 6 obtained by casting for internal defects using, for example, a magnetic detector or an ultrasonic detector. It is because the material for forging does not always have good castability, and confirming that there is no internal defect before die forging is preferable in terms of quality control.
- the temperature of the material to be forged (preform made of a material for forging 6 ) required in the rough forging step 16 is preferably within a range between approximately 450° C. to a melting point, which is higher than the general temperature.
- a melting point of the A6061 alloy is approximately 652° C.
- the temperature of the material to be forged is preferably lower than the temperature in the rough forging step 16 , and for example, within a range between approximately 370 to 450° C. generally required in forging the aluminum alloy.
- the forged material 4 is cooled by, for example, a cooling step 17 , and then separated into the forged product and the flash materials by, for example, the trimming step 18 .
- the forged product is then subjected to solution heat and aging treatment such as T4 to T6 by, for example, a heat treatment step 19 to improve the mechanical properties, thus becoming the final metal product 7 .
- solution heat and aging treatment such as T4 to T6 by, for example, a heat treatment step 19 to improve the mechanical properties, thus becoming the final metal product 7 .
- T4 and T6 treatments are desirable heat treatments.
- the preform made of a material for forging obtained by melting the starting material to obtain the molten metal and then casting can be formed into a shape similar to the shape of the final product rather than the round bar as the conventional material for forging while obtaining the strength increasing effect by forging.
- the present invention for passing steps of extrusion, cutting, heating, coarse forging, rough forging, finish forging, or the like, as the conventional forging process, thereby simplifying the forging process and reducing manufacturing costs.
- Main trace metals contained in the aluminum alloy used in casting and forging are silicon, magnesium, copper, and manganese.
- Silicon is an element that, when contained, increases fluidity, reduces occurrence of shrinkage cavities, is precipitated as Mg 2 Si by being mixed with magnesium, and improves mechanical properties such as elongation, tensile strength, or proof stress.
- the aluminum alloy preferably contains 0.4 to 0.8% by mass of silicon. Less than 0.4% by mass of silicon reduces castability from the molten metal, and more than 0.8% by mass of silicon reduces forging formability; thus both are not preferable.
- Magnesium is an element that, when contained, is precipitated in a matrix as Mg 2 Si by being mixed with silicon, and improves mechanical properties such as elongation, tensile strength, or proof stress.
- the aluminum alloy preferably contains 0.8 to 1.2% by mass of magnesium. Less than 0.8% by mass of magnesium causes insufficient strength, and more than 1.2% by mass of magnesium is likely to cause casting defects, thus both are not preferable.
- Copper is an element that, when contained, improves strength.
- an Al—Cu or Al—Cu—Mg system precipitate can be obtained that is generated by aging treatment in which the forged product is cooled and then left at room temperature and crystals are precipitated over time.
- the precipitate promotes the strength increase effect by precipitated Mg 2 Si as described above to increase strength.
- the aluminum alloy preferably contains 0.15 to 0.4% by mass of copper. Less than 0.15% by mass of copper does not increase strength, and more than 0.4% by mass of copper reduces corrosion resistance to prevent the strength from being kept over time, thus both are not preferable.
- Chromium is an element that, when contained, restrains recrystallization of the aluminum alloy and growth of crystal grains. This causes microstructure in the aluminum alloy to be maintained in a fine manner to keep the strength.
- the aluminum alloy When applied to a vehicle suspension part for an automobile or the like, the aluminum alloy preferably contains a trace amount of chromium, that is, 0.04 to 0.35% by mass of chromium, because the mechanical properties such as elongation, tensile strength, or proof stress need to be held over time.
- a material for forging preferably contains 0.4 to 0.8% by mass of silicon, 0.8 to 1.2% by mass of magnesium, 0.15 to 0.4% by mass of copper, and 0.04 to 0.35% by mass of chromium; more preferably, it is an aluminum alloy consisting essentially of 0.4 to 0.8% by mass of silicon, 0.8 to 1.2% by mass of magnesium, 0.15 to 0.4% by mass of copper, 0.04 to 0.35% by mass of chromium and the balance of aluminum.
- it may contain any element other than mentioned above that may be contained as an inevitable impurity.
- FIG. 2 shows an embodiment of the aluminum cast-forged product, and shows a knuckle steering of the vehicle suspension part.
- An A6061 alloy material was prepared as a starting material, and the knuckle steering was manufactured by the following steps.
- the starting material was melted at a predetermined melting temperature to obtain molten metal, and a preform made of a material for forging formed into a shape so as to provide a desired forging ratio with respect to a shape of a final knuckle steering was cast at a predetermined casting temperature.
- the preform made of a material for forging was forged with a die under predetermined rough forging load by a forging press at a rough forging temperature of 500° C. (surface temperature) to obtain a rough forged material.
- the rough forged material was again forged with a die under predetermined finish forging load by a forging press at a finish forging temperature of 430° C. (surface temperature).
- the forged material was trimmed, heated at 550° C. for three hours as solution heat treatment using an atmosphere furnace, then cooled, and heated at 180° C. for six hours as aging heat treatment to obtain the knuckle steering as a product.
- Comparative Example A knuckle steering was manufactured similarly to the example except that the rough forging temperature was 430° C. From three pieces of knuckle steering as the obtained products (products No. 11 to 13 ), specimens are cut out similarly to the example, and tensile strength, proof stress, and elongation as mechanical properties for each specimen were measured. The results are shown in Table 2. TABLE 2 Mechanical properties Tensile Proof Product TP strength stress Elongation No. No.
- the results of the example revealed that the aluminum cast-forged product produced by the method for manufacturing an aluminum cast-forged product according to the present invention has the mechanical properties superior in all of the tensile strength, the proof stress, and the elongation. Further, the results of the example in combination with the results of the comparative example revealed that the aluminum cast-forged product produced by the method for manufacturing an aluminum cast-forged product according to the present invention has the mechanical properties such that, in particular, elongation is remarkably improved with less variation, compared to the aluminum cast-forged product manufactured at the forging temperature lower than the temperature in the present invention.
- the present invention can provide the aluminum cast-forged product that has high tensile strength, high proof stress, and high elongation, and good mechanical properties, using the manufacturing method capable of using recycled materials as the starting material, omitting processes, and reducing manufacturing costs.
- the vehicle suspension part is widely supplied as the aluminum cast-forged product, the weight of the vehicle is reduced to achieve reduction in fuel cost, thus reducing discharged carbon dioxide and contributing to prevention of global warming.
Landscapes
- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
- Forging (AREA)
- Vehicle Body Suspensions (AREA)
Abstract
Description
- The present invention relates to a method for manufacturing an aluminum cast-forged product in which forging is performed at a forging temperature higher than a general forging temperature of an aluminum alloy in a forging process to improve mechanical properties.
- To prevent global warming that is one of global environmental problems, reduction in fuel consumption of an automobile is required on a global scale. To reduce the fuel consumption, weight reduction techniques of an automobile are considered to be the most significant. It is because an automobile having reduced weight causes reduced load on a power source to allow reduction in fuel consumption of not only a gasoline engine but also of any power source. A most approachable weight reduction technique is to change a material to be used to a weight reduction material. Typically, using an aluminum alloy material, many automobile parts such as an engine cylinder head or an engine cylinder block have been manufactured and used.
- However, many of the parts are what is called cast products. The cast products are easy to manufacture, but there is a limit of improvement in mechanical strength. Thus, it is difficult to use the cast products for automobile parts such as suspension parts that need to be less corrosive, have a sufficient strength and a good extending property, and have fewer defects, and that significantly relate to safety. Instead, forged products or squeeze cast products (low speed injection molded products) have been manufactured and used.
- However, the forged products or the squeeze cast products have a problem to be solved of high cost, and applications thereof are extremely limited. The reasons why an aluminum forged product that uses a conventional A6061 alloy or the like and is preferably used for the suspension part for the automobile is high in cost include that the forged material per se is high in cost, and that the number of manufacturing steps is large. Further, for example, a squeeze cast product using an AC4CH alloy needs a large number of manufacturing steps and is low in injection speed, thus preventing an increase in productivity and cost reduction.
- On the other hand, it is clearly difficult to apply general cast products to the suspension part used in hostile environments, even if cleaning molten metal causes reduction in occurrence of defects. Thus, there have been increasing needs for reducing costs of the forged product having higher mechanical strength.
- The theme of the present invention is to provide a manufacturing method capable of reducing costs by using a casting and forging method and of producing an aluminum cast-forged product having improved mechanical properties compared to a conventional forging method. For example, the present invention has an object to provide an aluminum cast-forged product that has high tensile strength, high proof stress, and high elongation, and good mechanical properties, and is low in cost, using the manufacturing method capable of using recycled materials as a starting material and omitting processes.
- In order to meet the needs mentioned above, one may employ, as a counter measure, a manufacturing method by casting and forging (hereinafter also referred to as a casting and forging method) in which a material for forging is melted, and cast to obtain a preform made of a material for forging; then the preform made of a material for forging is forged.
- This casting-forging method may offer the following advantages, compared to a general forging method in which a material for forging such as of a wrought material in the form of a round bar is bought, cut into a length according to a metal product to be produced, and then, for example, forged with a die. First, unnecessary materials including flash generated in a forging process can be repeatedly used as a starting material for a material for forging to be melted. Generally, flash that is not used for producing a product accounts for at least approximately 30% of a starting material before the die forging. That is, at most approximately 70% of the forged material is used for producing a product, causing a big waste. This waste can be saved.
- Next, the preform made of a material for forging obtained by casting can be formed into a shape to match a final product such that strength is increased by later forging but the forging process can be simplified. The conventional forging method requires a step of cutting the material for forging in the form of the round bar into the length according to the final product, and depending on shapes of the final product, requires a step of bending the material for forging or a step of coarse forging before rough forging, but these steps can be omitted.
- An intensive study was made as to the forging process and it has been found that a manufacturing method described below can solve the above-mentioned problem and achieve the above-mentioned object.
- Specifically, according to the present invention, there is provided a method for manufacturing an aluminum cast-forged product, which includes a step of casting a material for forging of an aluminum alloy to obtain a preform made of a material for forging, and a step of forging the preform made of a material for forging to obtain an aluminum cast-forged product, wherein the step of forging includes a step of heating the preform made of a material for forging at a temperature of from approximately 450° C. to a melting point of the alloy. According to the present invention, there is also provided a method for manufacturing an aluminum cast-forged product, which includes step of casting a material for forging of an aluminum alloy to obtain a preform made of a material for forging, a step of forging that includes a plural steps of forging the preform made of a material for forging to obtain an aluminum cast-forged product, wherein a first step of forging in the plural steps of forging is a step of forging the preform made of a material for forging by heating the preform made of a material for forging at a temperature of from approximately 450° C. to a melting point of the alloy.
- In the above described two methods of manufacturing an aluminum cast-forged product, the step of forging includes a step of rough forging and a step of finish forging. It is preferable to carry out a step of rough forging by heating the preform made of a material for forging at a temperature of from approximately 450° C. to a melting point of the alloy. The step of rough forging is preferably performed by heating the preform made of a material for forging at a temperature higher than a temperature in the step of finish forging. In the present invention, the aluminum alloy preferably contains 0.2 to 2.5% by mass of silicon, and the material for forging is preferably an aluminum alloy containing 0.4 to 0.8% by mass of silicon, 0.8 to 1.2% by mass of magnesium, 0.15 to 0.4% by mass of copper, and 0.04 to 0.35% by mass of chromium. It is preferred that the aluminum alloy is one consisting essentially of 0.2 to 2. 5% by mass of silicon, and the material for forging is preferably an aluminum alloy containing 0.4 to 0.8% by mass of silicon, 0.8 to 1.2% by mass of magnesium, 0.15 to 0.4% by mass of copper, and 0.04 to 0.35% by mass of chromium. It is also preferable to use an aluminum alloy having a melting point of approximately 652° C. According to the present invention, there is also provided a vehicle suspension part manufactured by the above-described method for manufacturing an aluminum cast-forged product.
- FIG. 1 shows a block flow chart of an embodiment of a method for manufacturing an aluminum cast-forged product according to the present invention.
- FIG. 2 shows an embodiment of an aluminum cast-forged product according to the present invention, and is a side view of a vehicle suspension part.
- Now, embodiments of a method for manufacturing an aluminum cast-forged product will be described in detail. The present invention is not limited to the embodiments, but various changes, modifications, and improvements may be made based on knowledge of those skilled in the art without departing the scope of the present invention.
- The present invention relates to a method for manufacturing an aluminum cast-forged product obtained by forging a preform made of a material for forging obtained by casting a material for forging of an aluminum alloy. For example, unnecessary flash generated in forging can be included as a starting material, melted and cast. No limit is placed on a shape of the preform made of a material for forging, and the preform made of a material for forging may be in the form of a round bar. For example, the preform made of a material for forging may have a shape so as to provide a preferable forging ratio such that a final product obtains a strength increase effect by forging and a manufacturing process can be simplified.
- A feature of the present invention is that a forging process is performed with the preform made of a material for forging heated to a temperature between approximately 450° C. to a melting point. The forging process includes a rough forging step and a finish forging step, and rough forging is preferably performed with the preform made of a material for forging heated to a temperature between approximately 450° C. to a melting point. The finish forging after the rough forging is preferably performed at a temperature lower than the temperature in the rough forging, for example, a temperature between approximately 370 to 450° C. which are forging temperatures applied to a general aluminum alloy.
- Forging at a temperature higher than the conventional temperature allows the preform made of a material for forging to be in a thixotropic (semi-melted) condition, or allows Mg 2Si to be in solid solution if the aluminum alloy contains silicon and magnesium, thus providing a product obtained by forging with mechanical properties equal to or higher than a product produced at the conventional forging temperature. Therefore, the method for manufacturing an aluminum cast-forged product according to the present invention can preferably produce a vehicle suspension part that is used in hostile environments and requires good mechanical properties, while reducing starting material costs and manufacturing costs.
- Now, the method for manufacturing an aluminum cast-forged product according to the present invention will be described in detail with reference to the drawings. FIG. 1 shows a block diagram of an embodiment of a manufacturing process including the method for manufacturing an aluminum cast-forged product according to the present invention. The manufacturing process of the aluminum cast-forged product includes, for example, a
melting step 11 of melting a material for forging 8 that is a starting material to obtainmolten metal 3, acasting step 14 of casting themolten metal 3 to obtain a cast preform made of a material for forging 6, arough forging step 16 and afinish forging step 20 of forging the preform made of a material for forging 6 to obtain a forgedmaterial 4, and a trimmingstep 18 of trimming the forgedmaterial 4 to be a forged product. - In addition to these steps, there are preferably provided, for example, a
cooling step 15 of lowering a temperature of the preform made of a material for forging 6 produced by thecasting step 14 to a temperature appropriate for therough forging step 16, and aheat treatment step 19 of improving mechanical properties of the forged and trimmed product to obtain ametal product 7. - Known as the material for forging 8 is an aluminum alloy containing 0.2 to 2.5% by mass of silicon. Taking Al—Mg—Si system heat treatment type aluminum alloy wrought material A6061 (hereinafter also simply referred to as an A6061 alloy) by the Japanese Industrial Standard H4140 as an example, the block diagram in FIG. 1 will be described from the start. The material for forging 8 is not limited to the A6061 alloy.
- The A6061 alloy contains, for example, 1.0% by mass of magnesium, 0.6% by mass of silicon, 0.25% by mass of copper, and 0.25% by mass of chromium in addition to aluminum as standard composition. The material for forging 8 may include unnecessary materials such as flash materials, flash receivers, or detectives, but in such as case, component analysis of the
molten metal 3 obtained later by melting is preferably performed by emission spectrochemical analysis. - In the
melting step 11, the material for forging 8 is heated to be liquid metal, that is, themolten metal 3. A fuel for heating may be any of liquid, solid, or gas. An electrical heating source such as electrical resistance, electrical induction, or an arc, or an electronic heating method such as laser or electronic beam may be used. Further, a preferable melting furnace may be selected from furnaces of a crucible type, a channel type, a rotary type, or the like depending on heating methods. - The aluminum alloy can be melted with its temperature kept at approximately 680 to 780° C. to obtain the
molten metal 3. When the starting material includes unnecessary materials such as the flash materials, it is preferable to clean the obtainedmolten metal 3 for reducing impurities. - The casting
step 14 is a step of pouring themolten metal 3 into a mold, and after solidification, obtaining a cast product, that is, the preform made of a material for forging 6 as solid metal. A preform made of a material for forging 6 having a shape similar to a shape of the final product can be obtained depending on molds, and it is preferable to determine the shape of the preform made of a material for forging 6 in view of a balance between an improvement effect of mechanical properties by the later forging process and cost reduction by a simplified forging process. - No limit is placed on a method of the casting
step 14. For example, the mechanical properties of thefinal metal product 7 can be improved by low pressure die casting. The low pressure die casting is a method in whichmolten metal 3 is charged into a mold by low pressure by pressuring themolten metal 3 into a molten metal container by gas pressure, or vacuuming themolten metal 3 from the mold, and casting to obtain a cast product. It is preferable to inspect the preform made of a material for forging 6 obtained by casting for internal defects using, for example, a magnetic detector or an ultrasonic detector. It is because the material for forging does not always have good castability, and confirming that there is no internal defect before die forging is preferable in terms of quality control. - It is important, after casting and molding, to perform rough forging when the temperature of the preform made of a material for forging 6 decreases to the temperature appropriate for the rough forging
step 16, then perform finish forging when the temperature of the preform made of a material for forging 6 decreases to the temperature appropriate for thefinish forging step 20 to obtain the forgedmaterial 4. This eliminates the need for a heating step of heating the material for forging at room temperature to a certain temperature range required for die forging, and the need for heat, thus causing the heat for melting to be effectively used and reducing manufacturing costs. - For the aluminum alloy, the temperature of the material to be forged (preform made of a material for forging 6) required in the rough forging
step 16 is preferably within a range between approximately 450° C. to a melting point, which is higher than the general temperature. A melting point of the A6061 alloy is approximately 652° C. In thefinish forging step 20, the temperature of the material to be forged is preferably lower than the temperature in the rough forgingstep 16, and for example, within a range between approximately 370 to 450° C. generally required in forging the aluminum alloy. No limit is placed on means of the rough forgingstep 16 and thefinish forging step 20, but when the A6061 alloy is used to produce a vehicle suspension part as themetal product 7, a pressing machine of 2000 to 4000 tons can be used. The forging process is not limited to the two steps of the rough forging and the finish forging, but single forging is also preferable to simplify the manufacturing process. - The forged
material 4 is cooled by, for example, a coolingstep 17, and then separated into the forged product and the flash materials by, for example, the trimmingstep 18. The forged product is then subjected to solution heat and aging treatment such as T4 to T6 by, for example, aheat treatment step 19 to improve the mechanical properties, thus becoming thefinal metal product 7. For the vehicle suspension part using the A6061 alloy requiring high tensile strength and hardness, T4 and T6 treatments are desirable heat treatments. - In the method for manufacturing an aluminum cast-forged product according to the present invention, the preform made of a material for forging obtained by melting the starting material to obtain the molten metal and then casting can be formed into a shape similar to the shape of the final product rather than the round bar as the conventional material for forging while obtaining the strength increasing effect by forging. Thus, there is no need in the present invention for passing steps of extrusion, cutting, heating, coarse forging, rough forging, finish forging, or the like, as the conventional forging process, thereby simplifying the forging process and reducing manufacturing costs.
- Now, the aluminum alloy preferably used in the method for manufacturing an aluminum cast-forged product according to the present invention will be described.
- Main trace metals contained in the aluminum alloy used in casting and forging are silicon, magnesium, copper, and manganese.
- Silicon is an element that, when contained, increases fluidity, reduces occurrence of shrinkage cavities, is precipitated as Mg 2Si by being mixed with magnesium, and improves mechanical properties such as elongation, tensile strength, or proof stress. The aluminum alloy preferably contains 0.4 to 0.8% by mass of silicon. Less than 0.4% by mass of silicon reduces castability from the molten metal, and more than 0.8% by mass of silicon reduces forging formability; thus both are not preferable.
- Magnesium is an element that, when contained, is precipitated in a matrix as Mg 2Si by being mixed with silicon, and improves mechanical properties such as elongation, tensile strength, or proof stress. The aluminum alloy preferably contains 0.8 to 1.2% by mass of magnesium. Less than 0.8% by mass of magnesium causes insufficient strength, and more than 1.2% by mass of magnesium is likely to cause casting defects, thus both are not preferable.
- Copper is an element that, when contained, improves strength. From the forged product containing copper, an Al—Cu or Al—Cu—Mg system precipitate can be obtained that is generated by aging treatment in which the forged product is cooled and then left at room temperature and crystals are precipitated over time. The precipitate promotes the strength increase effect by precipitated Mg 2Si as described above to increase strength. The aluminum alloy preferably contains 0.15 to 0.4% by mass of copper. Less than 0.15% by mass of copper does not increase strength, and more than 0.4% by mass of copper reduces corrosion resistance to prevent the strength from being kept over time, thus both are not preferable.
- Chromium is an element that, when contained, restrains recrystallization of the aluminum alloy and growth of crystal grains. This causes microstructure in the aluminum alloy to be maintained in a fine manner to keep the strength. When applied to a vehicle suspension part for an automobile or the like, the aluminum alloy preferably contains a trace amount of chromium, that is, 0.04 to 0.35% by mass of chromium, because the mechanical properties such as elongation, tensile strength, or proof stress need to be held over time. In the present invention, a material for forging preferably contains 0.4 to 0.8% by mass of silicon, 0.8 to 1.2% by mass of magnesium, 0.15 to 0.4% by mass of copper, and 0.04 to 0.35% by mass of chromium; more preferably, it is an aluminum alloy consisting essentially of 0.4 to 0.8% by mass of silicon, 0.8 to 1.2% by mass of magnesium, 0.15 to 0.4% by mass of copper, 0.04 to 0.35% by mass of chromium and the balance of aluminum. However, it may contain any element other than mentioned above that may be contained as an inevitable impurity.
- Now, an example of the present invention will be described, but the present invention is not limited to the example.
- FIG. 2 shows an embodiment of the aluminum cast-forged product, and shows a knuckle steering of the vehicle suspension part. An A6061 alloy material was prepared as a starting material, and the knuckle steering was manufactured by the following steps.
- The starting material was melted at a predetermined melting temperature to obtain molten metal, and a preform made of a material for forging formed into a shape so as to provide a desired forging ratio with respect to a shape of a final knuckle steering was cast at a predetermined casting temperature. Then, the preform made of a material for forging was forged with a die under predetermined rough forging load by a forging press at a rough forging temperature of 500° C. (surface temperature) to obtain a rough forged material. Next, the rough forged material was again forged with a die under predetermined finish forging load by a forging press at a finish forging temperature of 430° C. (surface temperature). Finally, the forged material was trimmed, heated at 550° C. for three hours as solution heat treatment using an atmosphere furnace, then cooled, and heated at 180° C. for six hours as aging heat treatment to obtain the knuckle steering as a product.
- From three pieces of knuckle steering as the obtained products (products No. 1 to 3), specimens are cut out at specimen taking positions A to G shown in FIG. 2, and tensile strength, proof stress, and elongation as mechanical properties for each specimen were measured. The results are shown in Table 1.
- The mechanical properties such as tensile strength, proof stress, and elongation were obtained according to a test method defined by the Japanese Industrial Standard Z2201, and the proof stress refers to 0.2% proof stress.
TABLE 1 Mechanical properties Tensile Proof Product TP strength stress Elongation No. No. [MPa] [MPa] [%] 1 1-A 334 300 21.1 1-B 343 302 19.6 1-C 327 291 22.0 1-D 320 287 21.1 1-E 308 278 23.0 1-F 333 294 20.1 1-G 331 290 18.7 2 2-A 323 288 18.2 2-B 342 301 15.8 2-C 326 292 20.6 2-D 322 288 22.0 2-E 332 292 22.5 2-F 313 280 24.9 2-G 332 295 20.6 3 3-A 329 296 17.7 3-B 335 294 22.0 3-C 329 292 23.0 3-D 320 285 20.6 3-E 330 290 16.7 3-F 312 277 23.9 3-G 331 281 22.5 Average 327.24 290.14 20.79 MAX 343 302 24.9 MIN 308 277 15.8 - Comparative Example A knuckle steering was manufactured similarly to the example except that the rough forging temperature was 430° C. From three pieces of knuckle steering as the obtained products (products No. 11 to 13), specimens are cut out similarly to the example, and tensile strength, proof stress, and elongation as mechanical properties for each specimen were measured. The results are shown in Table 2.
TABLE 2 Mechanical properties Tensile Proof Product TP strength stress Elongation No. No. [MPa] [MPa] [%] 11 11-A 334 294 14.8 11-B 338 297 20.1 11-C 333 295 18.2 11-D 312 288 15.8 11-E 336 293 15.8 11-F 319 283 20.1 11-G 338 292 21.1 12 12-A 338 299 9.6 12-B 336 294 19.1 12-C 330 294 19.1 12-D 319 289 18.7 12-E 336 292 17.2 12-F 319 281 18.2 12-G 339 303 21.1 13 13-A 336 298 12.4 13-B 335 287 20.1 13-C 326 289 18.7 13-D 309 272 18.2 13-E 333 289 16.3 13-F 316 280 20.6 13-G 340 296 12.9 Average 329.62 290.71 17.53 MAX 340 303 21.1 MIN 309 272 9.6 - The results of the example revealed that the aluminum cast-forged product produced by the method for manufacturing an aluminum cast-forged product according to the present invention has the mechanical properties superior in all of the tensile strength, the proof stress, and the elongation. Further, the results of the example in combination with the results of the comparative example revealed that the aluminum cast-forged product produced by the method for manufacturing an aluminum cast-forged product according to the present invention has the mechanical properties such that, in particular, elongation is remarkably improved with less variation, compared to the aluminum cast-forged product manufactured at the forging temperature lower than the temperature in the present invention.
- As described above, the present invention can provide the aluminum cast-forged product that has high tensile strength, high proof stress, and high elongation, and good mechanical properties, using the manufacturing method capable of using recycled materials as the starting material, omitting processes, and reducing manufacturing costs. Thus, if, for example, the vehicle suspension part is widely supplied as the aluminum cast-forged product, the weight of the vehicle is reduced to achieve reduction in fuel cost, thus reducing discharged carbon dioxide and contributing to prevention of global warming.
Claims (11)
Priority Applications (2)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US10/235,995 US20040221931A1 (en) | 2002-09-09 | 2002-09-09 | Aluminum cast -forged product and method for manufacturing aluminum cast-forged product |
| EP02256532A EP1400292A1 (en) | 2002-09-09 | 2002-09-20 | Aluminum cast-forged product and method for manufacturing aluminum cast-forged product |
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US10/235,995 US20040221931A1 (en) | 2002-09-09 | 2002-09-09 | Aluminum cast -forged product and method for manufacturing aluminum cast-forged product |
| EP02256532A EP1400292A1 (en) | 2002-09-09 | 2002-09-20 | Aluminum cast-forged product and method for manufacturing aluminum cast-forged product |
Publications (1)
| Publication Number | Publication Date |
|---|---|
| US20040221931A1 true US20040221931A1 (en) | 2004-11-11 |
Family
ID=33553789
Family Applications (1)
| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| US10/235,995 Abandoned US20040221931A1 (en) | 2002-09-09 | 2002-09-09 | Aluminum cast -forged product and method for manufacturing aluminum cast-forged product |
Country Status (2)
| Country | Link |
|---|---|
| US (1) | US20040221931A1 (en) |
| EP (1) | EP1400292A1 (en) |
Cited By (1)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US20130125606A1 (en) * | 2009-11-13 | 2013-05-23 | Imperial Innovations Limited | Method of forming a component of complex shape from sheet material |
Families Citing this family (2)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| WO2009006939A1 (en) | 2007-07-09 | 2009-01-15 | Bharat Forge Aluminiumtechnik Gmbh & Co. Kg | Casting-forging of wrought alloys |
| CN102357628A (en) * | 2011-10-13 | 2012-02-22 | 北京机电研究所 | Method for forming aluminum alloy branch forgings |
Citations (1)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US6678574B2 (en) * | 2000-10-11 | 2004-01-13 | Kobe Steel, Ltd. | Method for producing suspension parts of aluminum alloy |
Family Cites Families (7)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| JPS62187539A (en) * | 1986-02-13 | 1987-08-15 | Asahi Tekko Kk | Compatible method for forging after aluminum casting |
| JPH0673482A (en) * | 1992-08-26 | 1994-03-15 | Honda Motor Co Ltd | Aluminum alloy member and its production |
| JPH1112675A (en) * | 1997-06-28 | 1999-01-19 | Kobe Steel Ltd | Production of aluminum alloy for hot forging and hot forged product |
| FR2778125B1 (en) * | 1998-05-04 | 2000-07-07 | Serio Emile Di | PROCESS FOR MANUFACTURING PARTS OF CAST ALLOYS, PARTICULARLY ALUMINUM |
| JP3721020B2 (en) * | 1999-10-06 | 2005-11-30 | 株式会社神戸製鋼所 | High strength, high toughness aluminum alloy forging with excellent corrosion resistance |
| JP2001105090A (en) * | 1999-10-06 | 2001-04-17 | Yorozu Corp | Method of manufacturing suspension link |
| FR2803232B1 (en) * | 1999-12-29 | 2002-04-26 | Serio Emile Di | IMPROVED PROCESS FOR MANUFACTURING LIGHT ALLOY PARTS |
-
2002
- 2002-09-09 US US10/235,995 patent/US20040221931A1/en not_active Abandoned
- 2002-09-20 EP EP02256532A patent/EP1400292A1/en not_active Withdrawn
Patent Citations (1)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US6678574B2 (en) * | 2000-10-11 | 2004-01-13 | Kobe Steel, Ltd. | Method for producing suspension parts of aluminum alloy |
Cited By (2)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US20130125606A1 (en) * | 2009-11-13 | 2013-05-23 | Imperial Innovations Limited | Method of forming a component of complex shape from sheet material |
| US9950355B2 (en) * | 2009-11-13 | 2018-04-24 | Imperial Innovations Limited | Method of forming a component of complex shape from sheet material |
Also Published As
| Publication number | Publication date |
|---|---|
| EP1400292A1 (en) | 2004-03-24 |
Similar Documents
| Publication | Publication Date | Title |
|---|---|---|
| JP2614686B2 (en) | Manufacturing method of aluminum alloy for forming process excellent in shape freezing property and paint bake hardenability | |
| US20050279429A1 (en) | Aluminum alloy for casting-forging, aluminum casting-forging product and processes for production thereof | |
| US8372220B2 (en) | Aluminum alloy forgings and process for production thereof | |
| US4834941A (en) | Heat-resisting high-strength Al-alloy and method for manufacturing a structural member made of the same alloy | |
| EP1380662A1 (en) | Aluminaum alloy for casting/forging, aluminum cast/forged product and production methods | |
| JP5756091B2 (en) | Method for producing aluminum alloy forged member | |
| JP4801386B2 (en) | Aluminum alloy plastic processed product, manufacturing method thereof, automotive parts, aging furnace, and aluminum alloy plastic processed product manufacturing system | |
| EP0987344A1 (en) | High strength aluminium alloy forgings | |
| US9896754B2 (en) | Aluminum alloy sheet excellent in press-formability and shape fixability and method of production of same | |
| US10260136B2 (en) | Aluminum alloy for die casting and method of heat treating the same | |
| KR100933385B1 (en) | Aluminum alloy plate and its manufacturing method | |
| KR101950595B1 (en) | Aluminium alloy and methods of fabricating the same | |
| CN112981190A (en) | Aluminum alloy for die casting and method for manufacturing cast aluminum alloy using the same | |
| KR102529596B1 (en) | aluminum alloy | |
| JP2009041113A (en) | Automobile component | |
| US20040221931A1 (en) | Aluminum cast -forged product and method for manufacturing aluminum cast-forged product | |
| JP6857535B2 (en) | High-strength aluminum alloy plate with excellent formability, bendability and dent resistance and its manufacturing method | |
| JP6589443B2 (en) | Al-Si-Mg-based aluminum alloy plate, method for producing the alloy plate, and automotive parts using the alloy plate | |
| KR20200048518A (en) | 400MPa GRADE HIGH-STRENGTH ALUMINUM ALLOY AND ITS MANUFACTURING METHOD | |
| JP4022497B2 (en) | Method for manufacturing aluminum alloy panel | |
| JPH0835030A (en) | Aluminum alloy for casting, excellent in strength | |
| JPH04301055A (en) | Production of aluminum alloy sheet for forming excellent in deep darwability | |
| US12325905B2 (en) | Method for producing high-toughness, high-strength aluminum alloy extruded material with good hardenability | |
| JP3737055B2 (en) | Manufacturing method of Al alloy plate for automobile body and Al alloy having excellent strength and ductility | |
| JP2003001357A (en) | Manufacturing method of aluminum cast and forged product |
Legal Events
| Date | Code | Title | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| AS | Assignment |
Owner name: HORI INDUSTRIES CO., LTD., JAPAN Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNORS:KOTANI, KOJI;WATANABE, MASATOSHI;MACHINO, DAISUKE;REEL/FRAME:013449/0692 Effective date: 20021025 Owner name: ASAHI TEC CORPORATION, JAPAN Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNORS:KOTANI, KOJI;WATANABE, MASATOSHI;MACHINO, DAISUKE;REEL/FRAME:013449/0692 Effective date: 20021025 |
|
| AS | Assignment |
Owner name: ASAHI TEC CORPORATION, JAPAN Free format text: CORRECTIVE ASSIGNMENT TO CORRECT THE FIRST ASSIGNEE'S ZIP CODE, PREVIOUSLY RECORDED ON REEL 013449 FRAME 0692;ASSIGNORS:KOTANI, KOJI;WATANABE, MASATOSHI;MACHINO, DAISUKE;REEL/FRAME:013833/0674 Effective date: 20021025 Owner name: HOEI INDUSTRIES CO., LTD., JAPAN Free format text: CORRECTIVE ASSIGNMENT TO CORRECT THE FIRST ASSIGNEE'S ZIP CODE, PREVIOUSLY RECORDED ON REEL 013449 FRAME 0692;ASSIGNORS:KOTANI, KOJI;WATANABE, MASATOSHI;MACHINO, DAISUKE;REEL/FRAME:013833/0674 Effective date: 20021025 |
|
| STCB | Information on status: application discontinuation |
Free format text: ABANDONED -- FAILURE TO RESPOND TO AN OFFICE ACTION |