To make big, tradeable sow bars out of liquid aluminium, aluminium plants use heavy-duty casting moulds called high profile sow molds. Sellers need to see more than just the shape of an item to know how much it’s worth. Everything that goes on after the application is important: structure, material, dealing logic, and the application itself. Sow moulds are a useful part of the global aluminium value chain because they let smelters shape metal into shapes that can be moved or remelted later. It is important for producers to have a well-made high profile sow mould that can consistently make large sows, handle repeated thermal stress, and keep long-term ownership costs low in tough plant conditions.
What Is the Structure of a High Profile Sow Mold?
No, the term high profile sow mold doesn’t refer to a different metalworking process. It just means a bigger sow mould body that is used for making large aluminium sows. There are standard capacities for sow moulds, which are made for large aluminium blocks, of 1200, 1500, and 2000 pounds. Ingot moulds, on the other hand, are used for much smaller castings, a few dozen kilograms at most. Huan-Tai says it keeps patterns for ordinary and custom-made sow moulds and ingot moulds and can make them out of cast steel, materials chosen by the customer, or its own DuraCast® material. It also says that all surfaces that come into contact with molten metal go through thorough Non-Destructive Testing to look for surface and subsurface cracks. This is done to make sure that the parts last as long as possible when they are used over and over again in hot conditions. Simply put, a high profile sow mold’s structure is based on its ability to hold a lot of meat, stay stable, and last a long time, not on how complicated it is to make certain containers.
What Function Does a High Profile Sow Mold Serve in Aluminum Plants?
A high profile sow mold is used to make big solid sows out of liquid aluminium that can be moved, sold, and melted down again by other aluminium plants. Holding furnaces melt aluminium, which can then be turned into ingots or slabs. It can also be put into crucibles to be delivered as liquid aluminium. Solid sow casting is a good way to move aluminium up the value chain, as this shows. Second, when metal is retrieved, dross and skimmings are dealt with in different ways. In other words, picking a sow mould is not the same as getting aluminium out of dross. Bits that are smaller are sent further down the line to be used in cars and die-casting. A lot of the time, main or secondary metal plants that make large remelt units to sell to other plants use sow moulds. More important than getting the exact measurements right is getting these big sows to a pretty regular form and being able to handle them consistently. This is because they are usually remelted right in a receiving furnace.
Where Is a High Profile Sow Mold Applied, and How Should Buyers Choose One?
A high profile sow mold is used when a metal company needs to make big sows with a strong, repeatable shape. The mould also needs to be easy to handle, last a long time, and be worth a lot of money. Huan-Tai, a Chinese business, says that their sow moulds and ingot moulds are made with strict process controls and are made of heat-resistant DuraCast® material. The metal plant settings that these forms are made for are tough. The company says that certain kinds of steel can be used in some of the toughest work environments. For instance, crack resistance is more important when water is being used to cool things. People who are buying should know that picking between a low profile and a high profile sow mould is mostly about production and layout, not about getting better metal quality or casting faster. Still a better reason to buy something: it looks great, is well-made, lasts a long time, and is the right price. There is less need for accuracy in metal plants that trade with other plants as long as the sow shape is stable and the total cost of ownership is low.
Conclusion
For aluminium plants that sell remeltable sow bars to the public, a high profile sow mold is a useful large-format casting option. It’s valuable because it has a good structure, works reliably, and fits the processes of a business. A lot of the time, the easiest mould is not the best choice for buyers. Instead, they should choose the mould that best fits their production needs, how they will handle it, and how much it will cost to run in the long run.
As an ISO 9001-certified company that has been around since 1995, Xi’an Huan-Tai Technology and Development Co., Ltd. says it sells sow moulds, ingot moulds, dross presses, dross pans, and skimming tools to aluminium smelters all over the world. Quality that leads the market, great product design, world-class technology, innovative research and development, durability and longevity, and custom solutions are some of the things that the company talks about. It also says that its dross-processing development is being pushed forward with the help of David J. Roth, who was one of the first people to use modern methods to recover aluminium dross. You can start a direct conversation with the team at rfq@drosspress.com about a high profile sow mould for your aluminium plant by sending details about your plant and the castings you need.
References
- Campbell, John. Complete Casting Handbook: Metal Casting Processes, Metallurgy, Techniques and Design. 2nd ed., Butterworth-Heinemann, 2015.
- Stefanescu, Doru Michael. Science and Engineering of Casting Solidification. 3rd ed., Springer, 2015.
- Davis, Joseph R., editor. ASM Specialty Handbook: Aluminum and Aluminum Alloys. ASM International, 1993.
- Green, John A. S., editor. Aluminum Recycling and Processing for Energy Conservation and Sustainability. ASM International, 2007.





