Forge Magazine
Advertisement:
  FORGExpo
  Home
  Subscribe
  Subscribe To Forge eNewsletter
  Searchable Directories
  FORGE Buyers Guide
  Equipment Buyers Guide
  Resources
  Calendar
  Archives
  Industry Links
  Classified Ads
  Market Research
  Updates
  Features
  Columns
  Industry News
  Products
  Events
  FORGExpo
  FORGE info
  About FORGE
  Advertising Info
  Contact Us
  Editorial Info
  Media Kit
  Reprints
Search in: EditorialProductsCompanies
Forgemasters Receives Order for Record Castings

October 7, 2008

ARTICLE TOOLS
EmailEmailPrintPrintReprintsReprintsshareShare



Sheffield Forgemasters recently received an order, valued at about $17.4 million, to repeat its record-breaking castings for presses in China and Germany that will service the automotive and power-generation industries.

The U.K.-based company made engineering history in 2005 when it cast a forging press traverse for SMS Meer on behalf of Austrian company Böhler Schmiedetechnik. It weighed 340 tons and was the largest steel casting ever made in Europe. Sheffield equaled this feat in 2006 when it cast the foundation platen for the Korea Iron and Steel Company’s (KISCO) open-die forging press in South Korea on behalf of SMS Meer.

Casting of the new pieces will begin in early 2009 when foundry technicians start preparing the sand and resin mold to replicate the Böhler press traverse, which will form part of a 20-meter-high clutch-operated screw press used to manufacture aero-engine turbine blades. The other huge casting will make up the foundation platen or table for a 10,000-ton open-die press for Buderus, a German forging company.

According to Mick Holloway, senior sales manager for Forgemasters Engineering Ltd., “Both these orders were taken on the strength of Forgemasters’ expertise in making large-scale castings. We have tried and tested the technology to get these products right. To cast components on this scale takes an enormous amount of preparation, much of which has already been done in creating the patterns for both original castings. This reduces the lead-in time for the projects, but we still need to prepare more than 550 tons of molten steel for each casting, which then has to be poured in a continuous, controlled stream.”


|PrintEmail






FREE eNewsletter
Click the image above to sign up for
our FREE eNewsletter


Advertisement:
© 2010 BNP Media. All rights reserved. | Privacy Policy