Manufacturing of metal parts should be considered since the design stage, as contraints due to process, quantities and quality may vary from one manufacturing process to an other.

The objective of this article is to offer a simplified presentation of different process in order to give a glimpse of  possibilities and characteristics of different methods used in manufacturing metal parts.

ProcessAdvantagesDisadvantagesCosts
Machining-Flexible
-Allows a good surface aspect

-Little risk of material defect

-Available for all materials

-Some complex shapes are difficult to achieve

– Relatively slow

– Lot of waste is created

Average
Casting-Allows some complex shapes

-Reproducibility of parts

– Shape constraints for un-molding

-Not all materials are available

-Low for large series
-High tooling costs
Extrusion-High productivity

– Good material quality

-Very limited shape types

-Limitation of available materials

Low
Forging-Very good material quality

-High production rates

-Limited shape typesInexpensive for single parts in large quantities
Additive manufacturing– No material waste

– Manufacturing of very complex shapes

-Possible for the production of single parts

-Slow

-Not many available materials

High cost per part, but does not require tooling costs

Machining

Machining of metal parts requires the purchase of raw material in bulk and the use of a cutting tool mounted on a machine.

The metal part will be made by removing metal chips, so there is creation of a certain quantity of material waste.

Machining center

A machining center is the basic manufacturing device for machining a metal part. Material is removed from a part fixed to the machine frame by a cutting tool rotated at high speed and positioned with precision by an articulated arm.

There are many types of machining centers, most are numerically controlled (hence the name NC Center) and can have very different sizes depending on the parts to be produced. The complexity of the parts that can be produced on a machining center depends on the number of axes of rotation of the machines, we often speak of 3-axis, 4-axis, 5-axis centers, the higher the number of axes, the more the tools can make complex shapes .

In general, machining centers can work all materials (aluminum, steels, plastics) depending on the cutting tools used. It is nevertheless more interesting to specialize them in order to better use its tools and avoid the pollution of chips which would be more difficult to recover.

Machining center CNC

Numerical machining center

Lathe

Machining lathes allow work on parts with rotational symmetry. On lathes it is not the cutting tool that rotate at high speed but the part, the cutting tool being placed in contact with the part which rotates on itself.

For example pistons are usually made on lathes.

CNC automatic lathe

A CNC automatic lathe is a machine specialized in the production of small parts of revolution in large quantities, they are automatically loaded, rods of metallic materials being directly loaded into the machine, machined and cut. Most threaded rods are made this way.

automatic feeding lathe

CNC automatic lathe

Casting

The foundry process corresponds to heating a metal to transform it into a liquid state and pouring it into a mold to produce a negative part of the shape of the mold. There are different types of foundry offering particular characteristics:

Gravity casting

This is the most common type of foundry and can be done for all metallic materials. Casting can be done in a metal mold (shell casting) or via a sand/silica mold (sand casting, lost wax casting).

Gravity casting is a very inexpensive manufacturing method, requiring low investment in tooling and ideal for medium series. However, the appearance quality of the parts is poor and shrink marks may also be present in the sand casting process.

High pressure Die casting

High pressure die casting has been developed with the needs of the automotive industry, it allows, thanks to the pressurization of the molten metal, to achieve very fast manufacturing rates and very low wall thicknesses. This process is mainly used for aluminum and ZAMAK. The price of the molds is very high, but for large series it can be compensated by a very competitive unit price.

Metal sheet manufacturing

Production of sheet metal parts corresponds to the manufacture of a part from metal sheet materials. These sheets, of all materials, can be transformed using different processes:

Bending-cutting

The first step in sheet metal work is often the cutting of the sheet into a pre-cut which will facilitate its bending.

bending-machine

bending press

Punching

Metal sheet punching is a solution for cutting and removal of chunks of material which will end up on as holes on the folded part.

Laser / water jet cutting

Laser cutting is a process still under improving and allows complex sheet metal cuts to be made quickly with good uniformity in the quality of the cut edges.

laser-cutting-machine

Machine de découpe laser

Mechanical welding

Folded or unfolded sheets can be assembled together or with other metal elements using welding, which permit the manufacture of very though structures.

Extrusion

Extrusion is a process reserved for the light metals (mainly aluminum) and allows the production of parts corresponding to a stretching of a 2D shape. An aluminum cylinder is pressed against an extrusion mold, matching the vacuum 2D shape. The material takes the shape of the mold as it is forced through.

The shape of the extruded parts is entirely dependent on the shape of the tooling. The rectilinear parts thus manufactured can then be cut into different lengths and be otherwise worked (machined, drilled).

Forging

Metal part forging is the hitting of metal blocks with either a drop-hammer or die-type tool. The metal parts made in forging can be of any size and are generally appreciated for their high mechanical resistance, particularly in relation to foundry and machining.

Forged parts are widely used for all safety parts: carabiners, connectors, clips, etc.

There are mainly two types of forging:

Cold forging

In cold forging the raw material blocks are struck at room temperature. This process is mainly used for relatively flexible metals (Aluminium, copper, etc.). Cold stamping will harden the parts thus produced, this process requires more force than hot stamping but produces parts with lower dimensional tolerances.

Hot forging

Preferred process in particular for steel, the material is preheated (around 1000°C for steel) before being struck either with a drop hammer or with a die from which the material will take the shape.

Forgeage-a-chaud

Hot forging

Metal 3D printing

More correctly called additive manufacturing, it is the most modern process for manufacturing metal parts, with the first industrial metal parts made in 3D being released at the beginning of the 21st century.

The process of additive manufacturing, well known for polymers, is also increasingly used for metals, allowing the production of complex parts, comprising closed recesses or elaborate structures of all sizes.

Manufacturing only requires a 3D printer and a digital model of the parts to be made. The parts will be made level by level, by localized addition of laser/plasma melted metal powder.

Additive manufacturing can be opposed to machining which is carried out by removing material and therefore produces much more waste.

The quality of metal parts made by additive manufacturing has improved a lot in recent years, especially on the surface aspect where the manufacturing grain is no longer discernible to the naked eye. The main drawback of additive manufacturing for metal is its slowness of production, which limits this process to small or medium series and is not competitive for relatively simple parts.