Casting Alloy & Diecast Materials: The Practical Overview

By Haijiang Lai

Owner at YongZhu Casting

As a supplier of aluminum casting since 2004, if you have a project need to get off the ground. Contact us today, or Mail: yongzhucasting@gmail.com

Table of Contents

If you’re sourcing cast parts, two choices drive everything: the casting process (die casting, permanent-mold, sand, investment) and the casting alloy (aluminum, zinc, magnesium, copper-base). This page gives you a clean, cross-process view so you can pick the right material system for your part’s geometry, finish, durability, and cost targets.

Unlike single-metal articles, this overview intentionally compares die-cast materials side-by-side. We explain what people mean by “die-cast metal,” when to use aluminum die cast alloys (A380/ADC12/AlSi10Mg), and when zinc (Zamak), magnesium (AZ91D/AM60), or copper/brass/bronze are a better fit. You’ll also find quick selectors, concise tables, and buyer-ready checklists you can send with drawings.

What Is a Casting Alloy vs “Die-Cast Metal”?

  • Casting alloy = an engineered metal composition formulated to fill, solidify, and perform in a specific casting process.
  • Die-cast metal = a product/process term: parts made by forcing molten metal into steel dies under pressure.
  • Why it matters: fluidity, solidification range, hot-cracking tendency, pressure tightness, and achievable finish vary by both alloy and process, so the same geometry can demand a different alloy if you switch processes.

Which Casting Process Changes Alloy Choice (and Why)?

Die Casting (high-pressure)

  • Where it shines: thin walls, high output, crisp cosmetics, good dimensional repeatability.
  • Typical metals: Aluminum (A380/ADC12/AlSi10Mg), Zinc (Zamak 3/5), Magnesium (AZ91D/AM60).
  • Watch-outs: venting/porosity control for pressure-tight parts; draft and parting strategy dominate yield.

Permanent-Mold / Gravity & Low-Pressure

  • Where it shines: better ductility than HPDC, stable properties, good as-cast surfaces.
  • Typical metals: Aluminum families; some bronzes.
  • Watch-outs: thicker minimum wall; cycle time vs die casting.

Sand Casting

  • Where it shines: large parts, low tooling cost, versatile shapes, easy gating changes.
  • Typical metals: Aluminum, copper-base alloys.
  • Watch-outs: rougher surfaces, more machining, slower throughput.

Investment Casting

  • Where it shines: highly complex geometries, thin sections, excellent detail fidelity.
  • Typical metals: Stainless, cobalt, nickel… plus selected aluminum and copper alloys.
  • Watch-outs: longest lead time/cycle; cost per piece is higher but saves machining for intricate forms.

Cross-Process Snapshot: What Metals Work Where?

Process ↓ / Metal →AluminumZinc (Zamak)MagnesiumCopper/Brass/Bronze
Die Casting✓ A380 / ADC12 / AlSi10Mg✓ Zamak-3 / Zamak-5✓ AZ91D / AM60✓ selective bronzes
Permanent-Mold✓ common Al grades✓ some bronzes
Sand Casting✓ Al sand grades✓ brass/bronze family
Investment Casting✓ selected Al✓ copper-base & others

Use the table to narrow your lane, then apply the quick alloy selector below.

Casting Alloy Comparison: Aluminum vs Zinc vs Magnesium vs Copper

MetalStrength-to-WeightThin-Wall AbilityPressure-TightnessCorrosion BehaviorCosmetic FinishTypical Part SizeCommon Uses
Aluminumgoodvery goodgood (may need impregnation)good with coatpowder/e-coat; limited anodic options for HPDCS–XLenclosures, brackets, lighting, auto
Zinc (Zamak)fair (dense)excellent (micro-features)excellentgood indoorsclass-A plating/paintXS–Msmall precision parts, hinges, gears
Magnesiumbestvery goodgoodneeds coating; galvanic carepaint/e-coatS–Multralight housings, EMI covers
Copper/Brass/Bronzehighfairvery goodexcellent (many grades)plating/paintS–Lwear parts, valves, conductive hardware

*Relative Cost is indicative only; tooling, cycle time, and yield often dominate total cost.

When Should You Choose Aluminum Die Cast Alloys (and When Not)?

Pick aluminum if you need:

  • Best cost/weight/finish balance for S–XL housings and brackets
  • Broad supplier base, good cosmetics with powder/e-coat, good machinability
  • Reasonable pressure tightness (with proper gating/impregnation where required)

Consider other metals when:

  • Very small, micro-feature, tight-tolerance parts → Zamak often outperforms on wall control and flash management
  • Extreme light-weighting / EMI shielding → Magnesium (with proper coating & design discipline)
  • Wear, conductivity, seawater or chemicals → Copper-base alloys

Aluminum, Zinc, Magnesium & Copper — Quick Alloy Selector

AlloyShort TraitsTypical UsesNotes
A380 (Al)great castability, balanced strength & costgeneral housings, brackets, heat-dissipating coversglobal default for HPDC
ADC12 (Al)very similar to A380; easy flow & finishingelectronics housings, lighting, auto interiorwidely available in Asia/EU
AlSi10Mg (Al)stronger Al; better elongation/thermalstructural light parts, aerospace-adjacenttighter process window
Zamak-3 (Zn)best stability, thin-wall championtiny hinges, gearboxes, precision leversclass-A plating capable
Zamak-5 (Zn)higher strength than Zamak-3clips, buckles, small mechanismsslightly less ductile
AZ91D (Mg)lightest common die-cast alloylaptop shells, handhelds, EMI coverscareful corrosion design
AM60 (Mg)better ductility than AZ91Denergy-absorbing framesauto/transport light-weighting
C83600 Bronzewear + machinabilitybushings, valves, pump partscastable in sand/permanent-mold

Already working with A380/ADC12/AlSi10Mg? We can sanity-check draft, gating, and tolerance against your geometry and volumes.

How Do Material Choice, Finish & Cost Interact?

  • Cost stack: alloy price × shot weight/yield × cycle time × die complexity (slides/cores) × post-processing (deburr, impregnation, coat).
  • Finish reality: as-cast Ra differs by metal/process; powder/e-coat hides minor texture; plating favors zinc; anodizing options differ for die-cast vs wrought aluminum.
  • Tolerance & yield: zinc enables very stable thin walls; aluminum balances tolerance with weight and size; magnesium helps weight but needs robust corrosion strategy.

What Specs Do We Need to Recommend the Right Die Cast Alloy?

Send your RFQ with:

  • 3D CAD (STEP/Parasolid), 2D with GD&T; identify cosmetic faces and target Ra
  • Annual volume & ramp plan; target piece price or cost band
  • Key requirements: pressure tightness, mechanical, thermal, EMI, conductivity, weight
  • Operating environment: temperature range, fluids/chemicals, salt/fog, UV, sterilization
  • Compliance: RoHS/REACH, automotive, appliance, food-contact (if applicable)

FAQs on Casting Alloys & Die-Cast Materials

What exactly is a “casting alloy,” and how is it different from “die-cast metal”?
Answer: An alloy is the material system; die-cast metal refers to parts made by the HPDC process using that alloy.

Which die cast alloy is best for very thin walls?
Answer: Zinc (Zamak-3/5) typically wins for extreme thin-wall precision; aluminum follows closely; magnesium is good when wall is thin and weight is critical.

How do A380 and ADC12 differ for buyers?
Answer: They’re very close in properties and castability; selection is often driven by region, foundry preference, and finishing expectations.

Can aluminum die casting be pressure-tight?
Answer: Yes, with correct gating/venting and, for demanding applications, impregnation and robust leak testing.

Which alloys take the best cosmetic finish?
Answer: Zinc for bright plating; aluminum for powder/e-coat (and selective anodic finishes depending on spec); magnesium requires a qualified coating stack.

What should I send for a fast material recommendation?
Answer: CAD, annual volume, cosmetic/finish target, environment, and any pressure-tight or mechanical test requirements.

Need a Supplier to Review Your Drawing & Alloy Choice?

We’ve supplied cast parts for automotive, lighting, furniture, appliances, and electrical enclosures for 20+ years. Share your CAD + requirements and we’ll recommend an alloy/process combination and flag risks early (draft, thin-wall feasibility, gating, tolerance and finish). Send your files and target outcomes — we’ll get you practical feedback.

Yongzhu Casting Established in 2004, has become a leading name in the die-casting industry. We use die-castingsand-castingprecision casting and gravity casting, to cater various industries such as AutomotiveEnergyLighting, and Home Furnishings.

Send Your Inquiry Today