Which Process to Choose for Your Custom Metal Casting Service?
Sand Casting, Die Casting, and Investment Casting: Selecting the Best Process for Your Parts
Introduction: Understanding the three main casting methods.
Casting is essential in modern production, particularly for producing complicated metal parts at scale—and LE-TA's custom metal casting services ensure that each solution is suited to your specific design, material, and volume needs. Sand casting, die casting, and investment casting are some of the most commonly utilized processes. Each method has distinct benefits, material compatibility, pricing structures, and precision levels. LE-TA's clients commonly question, "Which metal casting procedure is best for my application?" Whether you are making high-precision aerospace components, low-volume prototypes, or large, heavy industrial machinery, selecting the right method—sand casting, die casting, or investment casting—can have a significant impact on cost, quality, and lead time. That is why our bespoke metal casting services are designed to assist you in assessing each option and choosing the most efficient and cost-effective solution for your individual requirements.
Sand casting: What Is It?
Melted metal is poured into a mold made of sand during the sand casting process. The cast portion is removed by breaking the mold once the metal has solidified. It is perfect for large components and low-to-medium volume.
Die Casting: What Is It?
High-pressure injection is used in die casting to push molten metal into steel molds, or "dies." It is frequently employed in high-volume manufacturing processes involving non-ferrous metals such as magnesium, zinc, or aluminum.
Investment Casting: What Is It?
Creating a wax model, covering it with ceramic, and then melting the wax away to produce a perfect mold is the process of investment casting, also known as lost-wax casting. Excellent surface polish and dimensional accuracy are provided by this technique.

Process Flow Analysis Sand Casting Process
1. Create pattern
2. Prepare sand mold
3. Pour molten metal
4. Cool and break mold
5. Clean and finish casting
Die Casting Process
1. Prepare steel dies
2. Melt metal
3. Inject under high pressure
4. Cool and eject
5. Trim and finish
Investment Casting Process
1. Build wax pattern
2. Wax tree Assembly
3. Dip in ceramic slurry
4. Burn out wax
5. Pour metal
6. Break ceramic shell
7. Surface Finish

What's the Difference Between Sand Casting, Die Casting, and Investment Casting?
| Types of Casting | Key Features | Best For | Surface Finish | |
| Sand Casting | Low tooling cost, flexible geometry | Large, heavy parts |
|
|
| Die Casting | High-speed production, tight tolerances | High-volume aluminum/zinc parts | Smooth, detailed | |
| Investment Casting | Excellent precision, complex shapes | Aerospace, medical, turbine blades | Very smooth, precise |
Comparative Analysis: Sand vs. Die vs. Investment Casting
| Factor | Sand Casting | Die Casting | Investment Casting |
| Mold Cost | Low | High | Moderate |
| Per Unit Cost | Medium | Low | High |
| Surface Finish | Rough | Excellent | Superb |
| Tolerance | Loose | Tight | Very Tight |
| Material Range | Wide(including ferrous) | Non-ferrous | Wide |
| Production Volume | Low to medium | High | Low to Medium |
| Lead Time | Short | Long | Medium |
Common Questions (FAQ)
Q1: What is the least expensive casting technique?
A: Die casting provides the lowest cost per part for large quantities. Lower initial tooling costs are associated with sand casting.
Q2: Can you die cast steel?
A: Not at all.Due to mold constraints, die casting is usually restricted to non-ferrous metals.
Q3: What is the best material for aeronautical parts that need to be very precise?
A: For intricate items, investment casting provides the highest surface polish and dimensional precision.
Q4: Can sand casting be used for prototyping?
A: Yes. Sand casting's cheap tooling cost makes it perfect for small quantities and prototypes.
Sand Casting vs Pressure Die Casting vs Lost Wax Casting
The geometry, quantity, and budget of your project will determine whether you choose sand casting, pressure die casting, or lost wax casting, which is another term for investment casting. Sand casting is perfect for heavier pieces and has minimal initial costs. For consumer and automotive items, die casting provides dimensional stability and repeatability. When it comes to medical instruments and aircraft components that require complex geometry, investment casting is unrivaled.
Sand Casting vs Investment Casting Cost Comparison
Which is more affordable, investment casting or sand casting?Sand casting is still the most economical option for big, straightforward designs. However, because of its better surface smoothness and tolerance, investment casting lowers machining costs even if it costs more per item.
Cost Breakdown Table
| Parameter | Sand Casting | Investment Casting |
| Mold Cost | Low | Medium |
| Per Unit Cost | Low to medium | High |
| Surface Finish | Coarse (Ra 6.3+) | Smooth (Ra <1.6) |
| Precision | Poor | Excellent |
At LE-TA, our custom metal casting services help you choose the best casting method based on your product's complexity, performance, and production goals.

Which Casting Technique Is Best for Complex Parts?
Tolerance and fine resolution are often the deciding factors when manufacturing intricate metal parts. For aircraft brackets, turbine blades, and precise surgical instruments, investment casting is the preferred method. Die casting is restricted to non-ferrous metals and larger volumes, but it also manages complexity well. Sand casting uses cores to support complexity, but it is less precise. Custom metal casting services from LE-TA help you choose the best procedure to strike a balance between performance, cost, and complexity.
Need guidance for your design? Talk to LE-TA’s engineers now →
Sand Casting vs Die Casting: Which is Stronger?
Die casting, particularly for aluminum alloys, usually results in stronger parts because of denser structures and improved surface bonding. Sand casting, on the other hand, is still useful for larger parts where weight and density are less important, but it can provide more porous finishes. For both, LE-TA offers post-treatment choices and metallurgical analysis.
Low-Volume Production Casting: Sand vs Investment Prototype casting or small batch production requires flexibility. Although investment casting reduces post-processing by providing near-net-shape geometry, the cost per unit is higher. For iterative designs and minimal tooling costs, sand casting is more economical. We advise using sand casting as a first step for evaluating materials or validating design concepts. Use investment casting for working prototypes.
Surface Finish: Sand vs Die vs Investment
• Surface quality can make or break a final product:
• Sand Casting: Coarse, often requires machining or finishing.
•Die Casting: Excellent, minimal finishing.
• Investment Casting: Superior, often no post-machining needed.
Need a better surface finish? Request a quote now →

Sand Casting Surface(above)

Investment casting surface
When to Choose Die Casting vs Investment Casting?
Use die casting when:
• Large quantities are needed
• Part geometry is less complex
• Shorter cycle time is required
Choose investment casting when:
• High dimensional accuracy is essential
• Complex structures and thin walls are involved
• You're working with stainless steel, titanium, or cobalt alloys

FAQ: Pain Points & Answers
Q: What's the cheapest casting method?
A: Sand casting is the most cost-effective for simple, large parts.
Q: Can investment casting replace die casting for small runs?
A: Yes, particularly when accuracy and precision are more important than price.
Q: Which procedure works best for aeronautical parts?
A: Investment casting because of its material flexibility and precise tolerances.
Q: How long do die casting molds last compared to investment casting?
A: Investment casting tools are less expensive but have a shorter lifespan than die molds, which can withstand 80,000–100,000 shots.
Q: Can aluminum be used in all processes?
A: Yes, with process-specific advantages.
The Casting Services Expertise of LE-TA We at LE-TA provide full-service support for investment casting, die casting, and sand casting. Based on your material, tolerances, surface requirements, and production volume, our technical team helps you choose the best procedure.
Why Choose LE-TA?
- Multi-process expertise for customized solutions
- Rapid prototyping & tooling to shorten development
- Global sourcing & pricing power to lower your cost
- Quality control aligned with ISO & IATF standards
- End-to-end service from DFM analysis to logistics
- Our Capabilities Equipment & Technology
- CNC machining centers
- 5-axis and 3-axis milling machines
- High-pressure die casting machines
- Induction melting furnaces
- Automated inspection systems (CMM, X-ray, etc.)
Certifications
- ISO 9001:2015
- IATF 16949:2016
- ISO14001
- ISO45001
- ISO13485
- RoHS & REACH compliance


Team Experience
Our engineers have worked in precision casting for the automotive, aerospace, and medical industries for more than ten years. Thousands of casting solutions that satisfy strict technical specifications and timeframes have been provided by us. Ready to start your casting project? Request a quote now →
Why Work with LE-TA?
• In-house engineering + manufacturing = faster lead times
• Global sourcing = better pricing
• One-stop casting solution = less complexity for you
• Trusted by global OEMs across 30+ countries








