- Warpage
- Deformation other than contraction that develops in a casting
between solidification and room temperature; also, distortion
occurring during annealing, stress relieving, and high-temperature
service.
- Wash
- A casting defect resulting from erosion of sand by metal
flowing over the mold or corded surfaces. They appear as rough
spots and excess metal on the casting surface. Also call cuts.
- Washburn Core
- A thin core which constricts the riser at the point of
attachment to the casting. The thin core heats quickly and
promotes feeding of the casting. Riser removal cost is
minimized.
- Water Test
- To subject a casting to water pressure in such a manner that
any porous areas will show leakage.
- Water Glass
- Sodium silicate (an inorganic binder system), a viscous liquid
which when mixed with powered fireclay forms a refractory cement.
- Wax Pattern
- 1) A precise duplicate, allowing for shrinkage, of the casting
and required gates, usually formed by pouring or injecting
molten wax into a die or mold, 2) wax molded around the parts
to be welded by a termite welding process.
- Wear
- The undesired deterioration of a component by the removal of
material from its surface.
- Weld Bead
- The built-up portion of a fusion weld, formed either from the filler
metal or the melting of the parent metal.
- Welding
- A process used to join metals by the application of heat.
Fusion welding, which includes gas, arc, and resistance welding,
requires that the parent metals be melted.
- Welding, Arc
- Welding accomplished by using an electric arc that can be
formed between a metal or carbon electrode and the metal being
welded; between two separate electrodes, as in atomic hydrogen
welding or between the two separate pieces being welded, as in
flash welding.
- Welding, Autogenous
- Method of uniting two pieces of metal by melting their edges
together without solder or any added welding metal, as by the
thermite process that employs a medium of finely divided
aluminum powder and oxide or iron by which a temperature of
some 2982.2°C (5400°F) is obtained.
- Welding Electrode
- A metal or alloy in rod or wire forms used in electric arc
welding to maintain the arc and at the same time supply molten
metal or alloy at the point where the weld is to be accomplished.
- Welding Flash
- Skin exposed too long to the ultraviolet rays of welding or
melting arcs will burn as in a sunburn. Though temporary
blindness can result, it is not permanent, as is popularly
believed.
- Welding Shielded-Arc
- Electric-arc welding in which the molten weld metal is
protected from the atmosphere. An inert gaseous atmosphere or
fluxcoated electrode may be employed.
- Welding Stress
- That stress resulting from localized heating and cooling of
metal during welding.
- Wet Scrubber (Gas Washer)
- In air pollution control, a liquid (usually water) spray device
for collecting pollutants in escaping foundry gases.
- Widmanstatten Structure
- Plate-like structure seen in grains of steel in the course of
transformation of a solid solution.
- Wild Steel
- Steel which has not been completely deoxidized and reacts
violently after casting due to liberation of gases of cooling.