Casting Processes
Sand casting, lost-wax, centrifugal casting and 3D scanning — explained by your foundry in Mödling.
Sand Casting — the classic method
Sand casting is the most versatile casting process. It is used for single parts, prototypes and small series — in aluminium, bronze and brass. The process has remained essentially unchanged for centuries, but modern moulding technology delivers tight tolerances and clean surfaces.
Make the pattern
A pattern of the part is prepared — from wood, plastic, 3D print or metal
Make the sand mould
Sand is compacted around the pattern to create a negative mould
Melt the metal
Bronze, aluminium or brass is melted at 660–1000°C in the furnace
Pour and cool
The liquid metal is poured into the mould and allowed to solidify
Finish
The part is cleaned, ground and finished to specification

Lost-Wax Casting (Investment Casting)
Lost-wax casting, also called investment casting or cire perdue, is one of the oldest precision casting processes in the world. It achieves very fine details and smooth surfaces that are not possible with sand casting.
Wax model
A wax model is made by hand or 3D printing — as detailed as the final piece
Ceramic shell
The wax model is dipped in liquid ceramic multiple times
Burn out the wax
The shell is heated — the wax melts out (hence "lost wax")
Pour the metal
Liquid bronze or aluminium is poured into the ceramic mould
Break the mould
The ceramic shell is broken away — revealing the highly detailed casting

3D Scanning & 3D Printing
Modern digital technology complements traditional craft. With 3D scanning we can capture existing objects and use the data to make new patterns — useful for restorations or when no CAD model exists. 3D printing allows precise wax or pattern models to be made directly from digital files.
3D Scanning
Precise digitisation of existing objects, sculptures or machine parts
3D Printing
Patterns and wax models directly from CAD data
Which process is right for you?
Contact us and we will recommend the right casting method for your project.
