Im not sure of how you are thinking here
dont know how they do it in the dental labs , but I would guess that they make a wax pattern of what they want to make , then maybe dip it in another wax with a lower melting temperature than the original pattern
this will add enough much to compensate for the shrinking of the gold
then they of course fit it by hand to get the perfect fit
so I cant understand the need of expanding investment or why you should let it expand in one direction and not the other . even if the investment expand the void wouldnt be any larger than the wax original .
the investment I use is the same as used in the jewelry industry for gold castings , so I guess that the dental labs use the same or at least a similar investment .
that investment doesnt shrink
as long as the molten metal is liquid it fill up the mold totally , but when it sets it start shrinking , its the temperature difference from the set metal to room temp that makes the shrinking , so its already set as an exact duplicate of the mold before it start to shrink , so there is no distortions other than the 1,5 % metal shrinking
but stop here , now you mixed up apples and pears , they aint the same
you compare investment with silicone , that cant be done as they are used for 2 totally different purposes in the castingindustry .
the dentists probably never use silicone as they always only manufacturing one piece of everything .
the only time you use silicone is when you want to make a larger serie of the same thing
this time gary wanted only 2 identical pieces and he turned them by hand , by doing so I guess he saved a few hours compared to make a silicone mold , and for sure he saved a coupple of hundred dollars as he dont need to buy any silicone
you must compensate all 3 dimensiond on the wax to have it work
so if you got a gunpart you want to cast , take the originat part and put on a thin layer of wax before you start making the silicine mold for that part , it will give you an slightly oversized wax piece when you cast the wax in the silicone mould.
but in this case you compensate both for the wax and metal shrinking in the next 2 clomming processes .
then when you cast the wax positives they had shrunk approximately 1,5%
next you put it in the investmentand there you have no shrinking , but when the metalgoes from liquid tohard is nothing happened , its when it starts cooling down as an hard piece of metal the shrinking happened , so I guess it aint that difficultto duplicate a weapon part perfectly if you got a top of the line equipment and lots of different wax qualities to work with .
but in this hobby level of cast bronze cannons I have vever nade any practicalchages on dimentions other then the few chabges I make direkt on the drawing board
what do you mean by this : seems to be using wax rather than the gypsum silicone:
all those 3 materials have specific functions during the whole process , and none of them can br exchanged to any of the others