How to Selecting Leak-Tight Ductile Iron Pressure Parts: Graphite Morphology, Leakage Risk and NDT

Ductile Iron for Pressure Parts

Who this helps: Design Engineers / Buyers specifying pressure-tight iron castings—pumps, valve bodies, compressors, hydraulic housings—where leakage risk, durability and inspection cost matter.
What you’ll get: a material selection path (gray/grey vs ductile vs ADI), how graphite morphology drives leak paths, DFM rules that prevent porosity/shrinkage at seals, a copy-paste drawing spec, and a right-sized NDT & leak-test plan.

Prepared by YB Metal Solution. Share your drawing via /rfqYB Metal will return a part-specific material pick, leak-test matrix, and NDT coverage.

Author: YB Metal Solution Engineering Team (hereafter YB Metal)

Table of contents

  • Pressure-tight anatomy: where leaks start
  • Graphite morphology & leakage risk (gray vs ductile vs ADI)
  • Material picks by part family & pressure class
  • DFM to stop leak paths: walls, cores, junctions, seals
  • NDT & leak-test toolkit: what catches what
  • What to put on the drawing (copy–paste)
  • Proof it’s tight: pilot plan & evidence pack
  • Related internal resources (with slugs)
  • What YB Metal delivers
  • FAQs

Pressure-tight anatomy: where leaks start

  • Sub-surface gas porosity opened by machining on sealing faces/bores.
  • Micro/macro-shrinkage at hot spots and T/Y/X junctions behind pressure walls.
  • Core print & wash issues (under-baked cores, pooled coating) near fluid passages.
  • Thin webs/minimum wall below process capability, especially around threaded ports.
  • Surface damage (shot peen embedment, burn-on) compromising coating/impregnation.

Deep-dive on these mechanisms:

Fix Shrinkage Porosity

Graphite morphology & leakage risk (gray vs ductile vs ADI)

Material familyGraphite formLeakage tendencyWhere it fitsNotes
Gray/grey iron (EN-GJL / ASTM A48)Flakes → continuous networksHigher (micro-galvanic & connected flakes may ease leak paths if porosity present)Low/medium pressure housings, large basesGreat damping & machinability; needs robust porosity/shrink control + coating if outdoors
Ductile (SG) iron (EN-GJS / ASTM A536)Nodules → discontinuousLower than gray at equal process controlPreferred for pressure parts (pumps, valves, hydraulic bodies)Better toughness; supports tight NDT/leak acceptance
ADI (ASTM A897 / EN 1564)Nodular + ausferriteSimilar sealing to ductileHigh strength/fatigue parts that also hold pressureADI is a strength upgrade, not a sealing upgrade—control porosity/shrinkage like DI

Background on base grades:

Material picks by part family & pressure class

Pressures shown as bar/psi guides; confirm by code/customer spec.

Part familyTypical pressureCommon choiceWhen to upgrade
Pump housings / covers6–25 bar (90–360 psi)EN-GJS-500-7 / 600-3 (A536 80-55-06 / 65-45-12)Thin walls <6–8 mm (0.24–0.31 in) or high fatigue → ADI 1050-750-07
Valve bodies10–40 bar (145–580 psi)EN-GJS-600-3 / 700-2High temp/erosion → DI with alloy (Cu/Ni) + hard seats
Compressor covers / manifolds8–30 bar (116–435 psi)EN-GJS-600-3Weight/strength push → ADI 1200-850-04 with strict QA
Gearbox oil cavities< 5 bar (≤73 psi)EN-GJL-250/300 (A48 Cl 35/40)Shock loads or repeated leaks → move to EN-GJS-500-7

Minimum walls & section effects:

DFM to stop leak paths: walls, cores, junctions, seals

Walls & transitions

  • Keep uniform walls; avoid abrupt steps near pressure zones.
  • Fillets generous: see Fillet & Radius Rules

Cores & prints

  • Vent blind cavities; avoid coating pooling; bake to spec.
  • Place prints where post-core gas can escape (not into pressure faces).

Hot spots & feeding

  • Identify T/Y/X junctions; require directional solidification with risers/chills; validate with cut-ups on pilots.
  • Guide: Fix Shrinkage Porosity

Sealing faces & finish

Tolerances & stock

Process choice

NDT & leak-test toolkit: what catches what

MethodFindsGood forNotes
Pressure test (air under water)Through-leaks (gross to fine)All pressure partsSimple & visual; specify pressure/time
Dry air decay / differentialFine leaks quantitativelySmall/medium partsRepeatable; avoids water contamination
Helium mass-spec (sniff/vacuum)Very fine leaksCritical valves, thin passagesHighest sensitivity; cost ↑
Dye-penetrant (PT)Surface-breaking cracksAfter machiningGood for seal faces; won’t see subsurface
X-ray / CTMacro-shrinkage, porosity clustersHot spots, pilots & root-causePlan views & criteria up front
UT / MTInternal flaws / surface cracksThick sections / ferritic surfacesCoverage depends on geometry/finish

For acceptance, tie test choice to risk class (see drawing text below).

Proof it’s tight: pilot plan & evidence pack

Pilot (3–5 pcs):

  • Leak test at operating + safety margin; record pass/fail & rate (cc/min).
  • X-ray/CT or cut-ups at predicted hot spots (1–2 pieces).
  • Metallography: nodularity %, porosity/shrink class near pressure wall.
  • CMM FAI: sealing-face flatness/position; datum stack.

Series control: moisture/LOI windows, core bake logs, pour temp, transfer time (if ADI), riser/chill layouts under doc control.

What YB Metal delivers

YB Metal quotes with a machining plan attached:

  • YB Metal Solution quotes with a pressure-part readiness pack:
  • Material decision: DI/ADI vs GJL with ASTM⇆EN nearest equivalents, wall & section guidance.
  • Leak-test plan: pressure level/time, air vs helium vs water; gage R&R friendly setup.
  • NDT map: which zones get X-ray/CT/UT/PT and why.
  • Pilot evidence pack: leak logs (bar/psi & cc/min), X-ray/CT images or cut-ups, metallography (nodularity %, porosity class), CMM FAI on sealing stack.
  • Need a part-specific plan? Upload your drawing at /rfq—we’ll return recommendations and a quote.

Upload your drawing via —we’ll return a part-specific plan and quotation.

FAQs

No. ADI ≈ DI for sealing; it’s a strength/fatigue upgrade. Control porosity/shrinkage and machining at seals.

Use it as containment, not cure. Stable solution = fix gas/feeding + DFM; then decide if impregnation is still needed.

That’s typical for sub-surface porosity. Add post-machining leak test and adjust stock/DFM to avoid cutting into pores.

Matrix and HBW drift, local chills, or coolant contamination. Log HBW per batch and keep coolant clean.

Start with air decay (or air-under-water) + targeted X-ray on hot spots per control plan; reserve helium/CT for criticals.

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