Aluminum is often chosen for die casting parts because it gives buyers a practical balance: lower weight, good corrosion resistance, good thermal performance, stable production, and flexible finishing options. For custom parts, the material is not selected only by looking at a grade name. We usually need to consider the part structure, wall thickness, machining areas, surface finish, working environment, and expected quantity together.
For many OEM projects, aluminum die casting is not just about making a metal shape. It is about producing a part that can be assembled, machined, coated, inspected, and delivered repeatedly with stable quality.
Why Aluminum Is Commonly Used for Die Casting Parts
One of the biggest reasons buyers choose aluminum is weight reduction. Aluminum has a density of about 2.7 g/cm³, which is much lower than many common engineering metals. This is why aluminum is widely used in automotive parts, robot components, equipment housings, LED lighting housings, brackets, covers, and other parts where weight matters. ASM International also lists low density, corrosion resistance, thermal conductivity, ductility, machinability, and reasonable strength as key attributes of aluminum and aluminum alloys.
But weight is only one part of the story.
In die casting, aluminum alloys can fill complex mold cavities and form shapes that may be difficult or expensive to machine from a solid block. For example, a custom aluminum die casting part may include ribs, bosses, mounting holes, thin-wall areas, curved surfaces, and internal support structures. After casting, the part can still go through trimming, deburring, CNC machining, tapping, surface finishing, and assembly.
For a buyer, this means aluminum die casting can help reduce several manufacturing steps when the part is designed correctly.
| Aluminum Advantage | What It Means for Custom Parts |
|---|---|
| Lightweight | Helps reduce the weight of vehicles, robots, tools, and equipment |
| Good castability | Supports complex shapes, ribs, bosses, covers, and housings |
| Corrosion resistance | Useful for outdoor, lighting, and industrial applications |
| Thermal performance | Helpful for LED housings, heat-related parts, and equipment components |
| Machinability | Allows holes, threads, flatness, and assembly areas to be finished by CNC |
| Surface finish options | Supports painting, powder coating, polishing, blasting, and other finishes |
From our point of view as a casting supplier, the best aluminum parts are not designed around material alone. They are designed around the full manufacturing route: casting, mold release, shrinkage control, machining allowance, finishing, inspection, and packing.
The Aluminum Properties Buyers Should Understand
When buyers ask whether aluminum is a good material, the answer depends on how the part will be used.
Malleability and ductility are often mentioned when people discuss aluminum. Aluminum is generally easy to shape compared with many metals, and many aluminum alloys have useful formability. However, for die casting parts, buyers should not only ask, “Is aluminum malleable?” A die casting project depends more on alloy fluidity, mold design, wall thickness, ejection, shrinkage, porosity control, and machining requirements.
If the part must be bent after production, stamping or sheet metal may be more suitable. If the part needs a complex 3D shape, repeated production, ribs, bosses, and integrated mounting features, aluminum die casting may be the better direction.
Strength-to-weight ratio is another important reason aluminum is used. Aluminum is not the strongest metal in every situation, but it offers a useful balance between strength and weight. For housings, covers, brackets, frames, and many equipment components, this balance is often more important than maximum strength alone.
Corrosion resistance also matters. Aluminum naturally forms a protective oxide layer, which helps it resist corrosion in many environments. The Aluminum Association describes aluminum as lightweight, corrosion resistant, and widely used across transportation, construction, packaging, and technology applications. Still, buyers should be careful: outdoor parts, salt spray environments, chemical exposure, and long service life may require proper alloy selection and surface finishing.
Thermal performance is especially important for LED lighting housings, motor covers, electrical enclosures, and equipment parts. Aluminum can help transfer heat better than plastic and many non-metal materials. But the real heat dissipation result depends on part geometry, wall thickness, contact surface, coating, and assembly design.
Surface finish compatibility is another practical benefit. Many aluminum die casting parts can be powder coated, painted, polished, blasted, or otherwise finished. However, surface quality is not automatic. The mold condition, casting parameters, porosity, parting line position, gate location, and pre-treatment all affect the final appearance.
Common Aluminum Alloys Used in Die Casting
Buyers often ask, “Which aluminum alloy is best for die casting?” There is no single best alloy for every project.
A380 is one of the most commonly discussed aluminum die casting alloys. Eastern Alloys describes A380 as the most common aluminum die casting alloy in North America and lists typical die cast mechanical properties around 324 MPa ultimate tensile strength, 159 MPa yield strength, and 80 Brinell hardness. It also lists a typical density of 2.71 g/cc and a melting range of 540–595°C. These figures are useful references, but they should not be treated as a guarantee for every part, because final performance depends on actual casting quality, design, and testing requirements.
For international sourcing, buyers may also see alloy names such as ADC12, ADC10, A360, A413, A356, 6061, and 7075. These materials do not serve the same purpose.
| Alloy / Grade | Common Buyer Understanding | Practical Note |
|---|---|---|
| ADC12 / A380-type alloys | Common for die casting housings, covers, and brackets | Often selected for castability and cost-performance balance |
| A360 | Better corrosion resistance in some applications | May be considered when corrosion exposure is important |
| A413 | Used where pressure tightness is a concern | Often discussed for leak-resistant casting applications |
| A356 | Common in gravity or sand casting | Not the same positioning as standard high-pressure die casting alloys |
| 6061 | Popular for CNC machining and extrusion | Not usually the first choice for high-pressure die casting |
| 7075 | High-strength machined parts | Strong, but not a standard die casting alloy for most projects |
A common mistake is choosing an alloy name before reviewing the part design. In real projects, we usually review the drawing first. Wall thickness, ribs, holes, sealing areas, machining surfaces, tolerance, surface finish, and annual quantity may all affect the material recommendation.
How to Decide Whether Aluminum Die Casting Fits Your Part
Aluminum die casting may be a good choice when the part needs complex geometry, stable batch production, lower weight than steel, and better strength or heat resistance than plastic. It is also useful when the part needs secondary machining, threaded holes, surface finishing, or assembly with other components.
For example, an LED lighting housing may need both heat dissipation and a clean painted surface. A robot part may need stable dimensions and repeated production. An automotive bracket may need weight reduction and enough strength for assembly. An industrial equipment cover may need corrosion resistance, threaded holes, and a durable coating.
However, aluminum die casting is not always the best choice.
If the quantity is very low, the mold cost may not be economical. If the part requires repeated bending after production, sheet metal stamping may be better. If the part is a long profile, extrusion may be more suitable. If the part requires extremely high strength from solid material, CNC machining from 6061 or 7075 may be a better option.
Before quotation, buyers should prepare a few key details:
- 2D drawing or 3D file
- Estimated annual quantity
- Required material or performance standard
- Surface finish requirement
- Critical dimensions and tolerance
- Assembly or threaded areas
- Working environment
- Sample photos, if available
This information helps avoid wrong assumptions at the beginning. A good supplier should not only quote a price, but also check whether the part is suitable for the selected process.
Custom Aluminum Die Casting Parts from Yongzhu Casting
Yongzhu Casting focuses on custom aluminum die casting parts for different industrial applications. We support high-pressure aluminum die casting, mold making for die casting, CNC machining for cast parts, and additional process options when a project requires a different manufacturing route.
Our aluminum parts are used in automotive components, robot parts, LED lighting housings, energy equipment, medical device components, home furnishing parts, and industrial equipment.
If you are not sure which aluminum alloy or process is suitable for your part, you can send us your drawing, sample, application requirements, surface finish needs, and estimated quantity. Our team can review the structure before quotation and help you understand whether aluminum die casting is the right solution for your project.
FAQ
Can Yongzhu Casting suggest an aluminum alloy if I only have a drawing?
Yes. We can make an initial suggestion based on the drawing structure, wall thickness, working environment, surface finish, strength requirements, and quantity. Final material requirements should still follow the customer’s drawing, standard, or confirmed sample.
Does every aluminum die casting part need CNC machining?
No. Some non-critical surfaces can remain as-cast. However, holes, threads, sealing surfaces, flat assembly areas, and tight-tolerance dimensions usually need CNC machining after casting.
Can aluminum die casting parts be powder coated or painted?
Yes. Many aluminum die casting parts can be powder coated, painted, polished, or blasted. The final surface quality depends on casting quality, porosity, pre-treatment, coating requirements, and the working environment.
What affects the cost of a custom aluminum die casting part?
Main cost factors include mold complexity, part weight, material, wall thickness, machining area, surface finish, tolerance requirements, annual quantity, inspection standard, and packaging requirements.
What should I send for a quotation?
Please send 2D drawings, 3D files, material requirements, surface finish, quantity, tolerance needs, assembly information, and working environment. If drawings are not complete, a sample or clear photos can also help with the first review.