 |
Dies can be made to form a virtually
limitless array of shapes and
sizes.

This diagram
shows the components that typically make up a die
slide, the tooling assembly, for a solid die.
The initial costs and lead-time
of aluminum extrusion dies and
supporting tools are usually a
good deal lower than the tooling
required for vinyl extrusion,
die casting, forming, roll forming,
impact extrusion, stamping or
pultrusion. Several factors
influence the actual cost and lead-time of a
specific die; the best combination
of product performance, quality
and cost is achieved when the
product designer, the die maker,
the extruder, and the purchaser
recognize each others requirements
and work together.
A typical extrusion
operation will make use of a die
assembly, including the die itself,
which, together with a backer, is
enclosed within a die ring, placed
in front of a bolster, with a sub-bolster
behind, all held together as a unit
by a tool carrier. The backer, bolster,
and sub-bolster provide the necessary
support for the die during the extrusion
process.
The extrusion die,
itself, is a steel disk (normally
H13) with an opening, the size and
shape of the intended cross-section
of the final extruded product, cut
through it. Dies are broadly grouped
as solid (or flat) dies, which produce
solid shapes, and hollow dies, which
produce hollow or semihollow shapes.
Combinations of solid, semihollow,
and/or hollow shapes may be incorporated
into a single die.
A solid die may have one or more
orifices or apertures through
which the softened alloy is forced
(extruded). Multiple apertures
in a single die produce multiple
extrusions with each stroke of
the press.
Solid dies may, on
occasion, be used to produce hollow
profiles by means of a fixed or
floating mandrel. The use of a mandrel
for extruding a hollow shape through
a flat die usually involves the
use of hollow billets, cylindrical
source stock that may have been
cast or bored. Piercing mandrels,
however, do not require the use
of cored billet. A
solid die, as shown here, produces
shapes without any enclosed voids
and/or semihollow conditions.
A semihollow die extrudes a shape
that is nearly hollow, partially
enclosing a void, the area of
which (the area of the die tongue)
is large in comparison with the
gap where the tongue is connected
to the main body of the die.
While a solid or semihollow
die is a single piece, it requires
support from additional tools called
backers and bolsters. Depending
on the complexity of the extruded
shape, the total cost of the extrusion
tooling may include charges for
these supplemental tools.
Hollow dies take
a variety of forms. Bridge, porthole,
and spider dies, for example,
include a fixed stub mandrel as
an integral part of the die. Each
type of hollow extrusion die serves
certain functions and carries its
own advantages and disadvantages.
The manufacturing methods and costs
vary widely. The choice of design,
and even manufacturing methods,
will depend on the profile, press
and container size, and production
requirements.
A semihollow die (left) also
produces shapes without enclosed
voids; however, unlike a solid die,
it produces shapes with a tongue
ratio of 3:1 or greater.
A hollow die
(right) produces shapes with one
or more enclosed voids. 
The most common types
of hollow dies are the porthole
and pancake. They typically are
the most cost effective and easiest
to manufacture, allowing the designer
to be much more creative in the
placement and shaping of the ports
and feed. They are also the easiest
for CNC Machining (Computer Numeric
Control), which allows for the die
maker and die corrector to quantify
any alterations for production improvements
on future dies.
A critically important characteristic
of extrusion dies is that the
effective bearing length controls
the metal flow through the die.
The objective is to have all parts
of the profile emerge from the
die at the same speed. The longer
the bearing length, the greater
the resistance to the flow of
aluminum and the shorter the bearing
length, the less resistance to
flow. Through effective design,
the thick parts of a profile can
be slowed through the use of longer
bearings to match the speed of
the thinner parts with short bearings. |