Zinc casting alloys are versatile engineering materials. No other alloy system provides the combination of strength, toughness, rigidity, bearing performance and economical castability. Zinc is the fourth most utilized metal on the globe.
ZAMAK # 2
This is the only ZAMAK alloy used for gravity casting; mainly for metal forming
dies or plastic injection tools. It is sometimes referred to as KIRKSITE. For die
casting, it offers the highest strength and hardness of the ZAMAK family, but long-term
aging applications should be reviewed. It has some interesting characteristics that
may assist designers. Its creep performance is rated higher than any of the commercially
available ZAMAKS (EZAC- High Creep Resistance Alloy still in development), and it maintains
a higher strength and hardness level after which makes it a very good choice for bearing
applications.
ZAMAK # 3
Usually the first choice when considering zinc for die casting,
ZAMAK # 3 offers an excellent balance of desirable physical and mechanical
properties, superb castability and long-term dimensional stability. No. 3 also
offers excellent finishing characteristics for plating, painting and chromate
treatments. It is the "standard" by which other zinc alloys are rated in terms
of die casting.
ZAMAK # 5
The addition of 1% copper makes castings from ZAMAK # 5
marginally stronger and harder than # 3, but also causes a reduction in
ductility, which can affect formability during secondary bending, riveting,
swaging or crimping operations. The # 5 alloy offers excellent castability
characteristics and improved creep performance over # 3. Because of # 3's wide
availability, material specifiers often strengthen components by design
modifications instead of using # 5. However, when an extra measure of tensile
performance is needed, # 5 alloy castings are recommended. The alloy is readily
plated, finished and machined.
ZAMAK # 7
A modification of # 3 alloy, # 7 has a lower magnesium content to
increase fluidity. To avoid problems with intergranular corrosion, lower levels
of impurities are called for and a small quantity of nickel is specified. Alloy
# 7 has slightly better ductility than # 3 with other properties being
comparable. Traditionally the alloy is popular for casting thin-walled
components requiring good surface finish. Note, however, that research testing
has shown metal and die temperatures have a bigger effect than changing alloys.
Close attention to control of the die-casting process parameters is important
to eliminate defects and achieve consistent quality.
ZA-8
A rapidly growing choice for pressure die
casting, ZA-8 is a good gravity casting alloy. ZA-8 can be hot chamber die
cast, with improved strength, hardness, and creep properties over ZAMAKs, with
the exception of a # 2 alloy, which is very similar in performance. Readily
plated and finished using standard procedures for ZAMAKs, ZA-8 is often the
die-casting choice when the performance of standard # 3 or # 5 is in
question, because of its high strength and creep properties and efficient hot
chamber castability.
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