
Many castings require internal passages, hollow sections, or undercuts—features that cannot be formed by the mold alone. The solution is cores: sand shapes placed inside the mold before pouring, which become the void spaces in the final component. At Juize Machinery, we design and produce cores that enable complex geometries without compromising casting integrity. As a Gold Verified Supplier on Alibaba, our foundry capabilities include both simple and intricate core designs.
What Are Cores?
Cores are preformed sand masses that occupy space within the mold cavity. When molten metal fills the mold, it flows around the core, creating a hollow region. After solidification, the core is broken down and removed, leaving the desired internal feature.
Why Cores Are Essential
Without cores, castings are limited to external shapes only. Cores enable:
Internal passages: Oil galleries, water jackets, hydraulic channels
Hollow sections: Weight reduction without strength loss
Undercuts and recesses: Features that would otherwise require machining
Complex port geometries: Valve bodies, pump housings, manifolds
Core Making Methods We Use
- Shell Cores (Resin-Coated Sand)
Heated core boxes cure resin-coated sand into thin, strong shells. Shell cores are:
Lightweight and hollow, reducing sand usage
Dimensionally accurate for tight tolerances
Easy to handle and place
- Hot Box Cores
Resin binders cure under heat in metal core boxes. Suitable for medium-volume production with good strength and surface finish. - Cold Box Cores
Gas-cured resin systems operate at room temperature. They produce high-strength cores with excellent dimensional stability, ideal for demanding applications. - Isocure / PUCB Cores
A popular cold-box method using urethane binders, offering fast curing and good collapsibility—sand breaks down easily after casting.
Core Design Considerations
Print Area: The core seat in the mold must support the core during pouring
Venting: Gases from the core must escape to prevent porosity
Core Strength: Must withstand metal pressure without breaking
Collapsibility: Core sand must break down for removal after casting
Surface Finish: Core quality directly affects internal surface condition
Challenges and Solutions
Core Shift: Misaligned cores create uneven wall thickness. We use core prints and chaplets to secure positioning.
Gas Defects: Organic binders generate gas. Adequate venting and low-gas binders minimize porosity.
Core Breakage: During casting, fragile cores can fracture. We select appropriate binder systems for section thickness and metal pressure.
Verification
We inspect core placement and integrity through:
Visual and dimensional checks before mold closing
Radiographic inspection revealing core position in finished castings
Sectioning sample castings to verify wall thickness

