Casting Core Post and Socket Joint

20250065396 ยท 2025-02-27

Assignee

Inventors

Cpc classification

International classification

Abstract

A casting core assembly comprising: a first ceramic piece including a projecting post; a second ceramic piece including a socket encircling the post; and a ceramic filler material between the post and the socket, wherein at least one of: in axial section at at least one location the post has: a lateral protrusion of at least 15 micrometers relative to a location proximal thereof; and in axial section at at least one location socket has: a lateral recess of at least 15 micrometers relative to a location outboard thereof.

Claims

1. A casting core assembly comprising: a first ceramic piece including a projecting post; a second ceramic piece including a socket encircling the post; and a ceramic filler material between the post and the socket, wherein at least one of: in axial section at at least one location the post has: a lateral protrusion of at least 15 micrometers relative to a location proximal thereof; and in axial section at at least one location socket has: a lateral recess of at least 15 micrometers relative to a location outboard thereof.

2. The casting core assembly of claim 1 wherein: the socket is a closed-ended socket.

3. The casting core assembly of claim 1 wherein at least one of: the protrusion is full annulus; and the recess is full annulus.

4. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein both of: the post has said lateral protrusion; and socket has said lateral recess.

5. The casting core assembly of claim 4 wherein: the protrusion is full annulus; and the recess is full annulus.

6. The casting core assembly of claim 4 wherein: the protrusion has an outward extreme; and the recess has an outward extreme axially outboard of the protrusion outward extreme.

7. The casting core assembly of claim 4 wherein: the protrusion is formed as a distal wall section of a full annulus recess in the post, a proximal wall section also being in the socket; and the recess is full annulus.

8. The casting core assembly of claim 1 and further comprising: a second said post and a second said socket and a ceramic filler material between the second post and the second socket.

9. The casting core assembly of claim 1 wherein: the protrusion forms a distal wall of a post recess; the recess is recessed relative to portions of the socket inward and outward thereof.

10. The casting core assembly of claim 1 wherein: a separation H.sub.G between the first ceramic piece and the second ceramic piece aside the projection and socket is 0.35 mm to 2.0 mm.

11. The casting core assembly of claim 1 wherein: in transverse section at at least one further location one of the post and socket has a configuration of: three circumferentially offset radial peaks of a peak radius (R.sub.PMAX1, R.sub.SMAX1); and three radial troughs of a trough radius (R.sub.PMIN1, R.sub.SMIN1) not more than 98.0% of the peak radius.

12. The casting core assembly of claim 1 wherein: the second ceramic piece forms a feedcore; and the first ceramic piece forms a skin core.

13. The casting core assembly of claim 1 wherein: the first ceramic piece has one or more bumpers protruding to contact the second ceramic piece.

14. A method for manufacturing the casting core assembly of claim 1, the method comprising: introducing a ceramic paste into the socket; and inserting the post into the socket, the inserting displacing the ceramic paste, the ceramic paste hardening to form the ceramic filler material.

15. The method of claim 14 further comprising forming the second ceramic piece by: molding; and machining the socket, the machining including an orbit of a ball mill cutting the recess.

16. The method of claim 15 wherein: the ball mill cutting is into a wall surface formed by ball end mill cutting with a different bit.

17. A method for using the casting core assembly of claim 1, the method comprising: wax overmolding; shelling to form a shell; and casting an alloy in the shell.

18. The method of claim 17 further comprising: deshelling and decoring.

19. A casting core assembly comprising: a first ceramic piece including a projecting post; a second ceramic piece including a socket encircling the post; and a ceramic filler material between the post and the socket, wherein at least one of the post and socket has a full annular recess into which the ceramic filler material extends.

20. A casting core assembly comprising: a first ceramic piece including a projecting post; a second ceramic piece including a socket; and a ceramic filler material between the post and the socket, wherein the ceramic filler is axially backlocked to the post and socket to prevent nondestructive extraction of the post from the socket.

21. The casting core assembly of claim 20 wherein: the ceramic filler is axially backlocked to the post and socket by at least 10 micrometers.

22. The casting core assembly of claim 20 wherein: each of the post and socket has a full annular recess into which the ceramic filler material extends.

Description

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

[0069] FIG. 1 is a longitudinal sectional view of a casting core post-and-socket joint.

[0070] FIG. 1A is an enlarged half view of the joint if FIG. 1.

[0071] FIG. 2 is a view of an example core having the posts.

[0072] FIG. 3 is a sectional view of an airfoil being cast by a shell containing a core assembly having the post and socket joint.

[0073] FIG. 4 is a sectional view of the resulting airfoil after outlet hole drilling.

[0074] FIG. 5 is a sectional view of an alternate casting shell including a core assembly that itself casts outlets.

[0075] FIG. 6 is a longitudinal sectional view of a first alternate joint.

[0076] FIG. 7 is a longitudinal sectional view of a second alternate joint.

[0077] FIG. 8 is a longitudinal sectional view of a third alternate joint.

[0078] FIG. 9 is a partial side view of an alternate core having posts.

[0079] FIG. 10 is a transverse sectional view of a joint without bonding agent for illustration and including the FIG. 9 core.

[0080] FIG. 11 is a longitudinal sectional view of the FIG. 10 joint taken along line 11-11 of FIG. 10.

[0081] FIG. 12 is a longitudinal sectional view of the FIG. 10 joint taken along line 12-12 of FIG. 10.

[0082] Like reference numbers and designations in the various drawings indicate like elements.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

[0083] Post and socket bonding involves tight geometries (e.g., 0.003 inch (0.08 mm) nominal radial gap). This is required by balancing alignment precision (favoring smallest gap) against manufacturing tolerance (e.g., of spacing of posts and sockets).

[0084] The example bonding material is a ceramic filler material. Such material is typically alumina and/or silica fines (e.g., 0.00001 inch to 0.0005 inch (0.25 micrometers to 13 micrometers) in size) delivered as a paste (e.g., with a carrier of water or colloidal silicasuch colloidal silica may be used with alumina and/or silica fines).

[0085] FIG. 1 shows a core assembly 20 having first core piece (first piece or first core) 22 having an integrally molded projection (post) 26 extending from a proximal end (root end) 30 to a free distal end (tip) 32 and having a peripheral wall surface 34. The proximal end merges with the remainder (e.g., at a body section 36) of the first piece which has a surface region 38 surrounding the proximal end 30. The post has a central axis (centerline) 520 and a height or length H.sub.P.

[0086] FIG. 1 shows a second core piece (second piece or second core) 24 having an integrally molded socket 28. The example socket is a blind or closed-ended socket rather than a through-hole. Thus, the socket extends from an open outer end (opening) 40 to an inner base end (base) 42 and has a peripheral wall surface 44. As with the projection proximal end, the socket outer end or opening is to a surrounding outer surface 46. The socket has a central axis 522 and a height or depth H.sub.S.

[0087] In a particular assembled condition with the post 26 coaxially seated (centered) in the socket 28, the gap 50 between them is filled with a ceramic filler material 52. As noted above, in the example implementation, the first core has bumpers 56 protruding from the surrounding surface 38. Each bumper extends from a proximal (root) end 57 to a distal end 58 that contacts the second core surrounding surface 46 so that the surrounding surfaces 38 and 46 are spaced apart from each other by a gap 60 that has a height H.sub.G which corresponds to the thickness of an internal wall to be cast.

[0088] In an alternative example implementation, the post is sufficiently taller H.sub.P than the socket is deep H.sub.S so that the post bottoms in the socket and the surrounding surfaces 38 and 46 are spaced apart from each other by the gap 60 of height H.sub.G without bumpers 56. In either situation, there is an axial/heightwise overlap span or zone of the post and socket having an overlap height H.sub.O.

[0089] In use, as in the '727 patent, the second piece 24 may form a feed core and the first piece 22 may form a skin core/outlet core such as for casting an airfoil element (blade or vane). In such a situation, there may be two or more such projections 26 on the first piece received in corresponding sockets 28 in the second piece so as to substantially fully position the first piece relative to the second piece against movement transverse to the post/socket centerlines.

[0090] Manufacturing tolerances for either of the pieces highlight the need for nominal clearances/gaps between the projections and the sockets. For example, manufacturing tolerances may cause the centerlines 520 of the projections of a given first piece to be slightly closer to or further away from each other than the centerlines 522 of the sockets of a given second piece to which they are to mate. Thus, the nominal clearance is engineered in to allow such tolerance with limited scrappage. However, too much clearance and core alignment is compromised. Thus, increasing annular clearance between a circular socket and circular post to facilitate paste flow may reduce the positional accuracy of the two cores.

[0091] A baseline post and socket are of circular cross-section and respective radii R.sub.P and R.sub.S thus would have a nominal (ignoring manufacturing tolerances/variation) uniform centered gap of radial clearance R.sub.G0 over a majority of the overlap. The radii may substantially taper near the post tip 32 and socket base 42 (e.g., a rounded corner to the respective cross-sections transitioning to flat transverse central portions of each). Additionally, there may be slight overall taper in radii due to small draft angles of the surfaces 34 and 44. However, R.sub.G0 may be uniform along the region of such draft angle.

[0092] The ceramic filler material continuously adheres to the post and socket to prevent extraction of the post from the socket. Adhesion is not relevant to other movements (e.g., any lateral movements) as this is more than addressed by compressive strength of the filler. However, a number of factors may contribute to loss of adhesion. A loss of adhesion may allow the post to pull out slightly, to increase the height H.sub.G of the gap 60 and thereby increase the thickness of the internal wall. More significantly, that displacement also causes a corresponding decrease in thickness of the external/exterior wall of the part outboard of the first core piece.

[0093] The loss of adhesion may be due to one or more thermal and/or mechanical factors. Thermal events may cause differential thermal expansion to break the adhesion. Such thermal events may include a pre-firing of the shell containing the core assembly and include the metal pour contacting the core assembly. Additionally, the metal pour can impose mechanical stimulus to break adhesion. Additionally, pre-firing handling may break adhesion. Thus, it may be desirable to configure the filler to provide mechanical backlocking to maintain relative core position even if adhesion is broken.

[0094] In distinction and departure from a possible baseline, the post and/or socket wall surface 34, 44 has other than a straight cross-section along a portion of its height or depth and, in particular, along a portion of the overlap height H.sub.O. The example FIG. 1/1A post cross-section has an annular recess 90 with a base minimum radius R.sub.PMIN and depth R.sub.P. The example recess 90 has a center 91 between lower (distal) 92 and upper (proximal) 93 extremes/ends with a height H.sub.PR therebetween. These lower and upper extremes are at junctions with intact straight-sectioned portions of the surface 34. The example central location 91 is itself along a straight-sectioned base portion of the surface 34. Thus, the example recesses are channels having upper and lower walls formed by post or socket material above and below (as viewed in FIG. 1).

[0095] The example FIG. 1/1A socket cross-section similarly has an annular recess 96 with a base minimum radius R.sub.SMAX and depth R.sub.S. Similarly to the post recess 90, the socket recess 92 has a central location 97 and lower (inboard) 98 and upper (outboard) 99 extremes/ends with a height H.sub.SR therebetween.

[0096] Example post recess radial depth R.sub.P is 1 mil (25 micrometers, more broadly at least 10 micrometers or at least 15 micrometers or an example 10 micrometers to 100 micrometers or 15 micrometers to 40 micrometers). Example socket recess radial depth R.sub.S is 1.35 mil (34 micrometers more broadly at least 10 micrometers or at least 15 micrometers or an example 10 micrometers to 200 micrometers of 15 micrometers to 50 micrometers).

[0097] Example socket depth H.sub.S is about 1.5 mm, more broadly 1.0 mm to 4.0 mm or 1.0 mm to 3.0 mm or 1.2 mm to 2.0 mm.

[0098] Example radius R.sub.S is about 1.0 mm for a cross-sectional area of about 3 mm.sup.2. More broadly, example radius R.sub.S is about 0.6 mm to 2.0 mm for a cross-sectional area of about 1.1 mm.sup.2 to 12.6 mm.sup.2 or about 0.8 mm to 1.5 mm for a cross-sectional area of about 2.0 mm.sup.2 to 7.1 mm.sup.2.

[0099] Example recess heights H.sub.PR and H.sub.SR are at least 0.25 mm, more particularly, 0.25 mm to 2.5 mm or at least 20% of the associated radius R.sub.P or R.sub.S or R.sub.PMIN or R.sub.SMAX, more particularly 20% to 80% or 25% to 50%. They may be similar fractions of the socket depth H.sub.S or the overlap height H.sub.O. The example recesses 90 and 96 are axially partially overlapping along a recess overlap height H.sub.OR. The example partial overlap involves a portion of the post recess 90 extending below the lower extreme 98 of the socket recess and a portion of the socket recess 92 extending above the upper extreme 93 of the post recess. However, other configurations are possible. Example H.sub.OR is up to 100% of (e.g., 30% to 100%) one or both of the recess heights H.sub.PR and H.sub.SR.

[0100] The axial overlap helps create an enlarged radial section of the gap with radius R.sub.GR substantially greater than the radial gap R.sub.GO above and below. This creates a keying portion 120 of the filler that prevents extraction of the post from the socket even if adhesion of the filler to one or both of the post and socket is broken. This keying portion thus has nominal radial overlap with the socket and post of essentially the socket recess depth R.sub.S and post recess depth R.sub.P, respectively. The keying portion itself has respective portions 120A, 120B keying with the post and socket respectively. In non-overlap situations, these may be viewed as a single keying portion joined by the filler material between them.

[0101] Even if there is a relative differential thermal expansion that breaks adhesion and creates a slight gap between the filler and one or both of the post and socket, there will still be sufficient radial overlap to provide backlocking because the lower wall surface of the post recess contacts the adjacent lower surface of the post keying portion 120A of the filler material and the upper surface of the socket recess contacts the upper surface of the filler material socket keying portion 120B.

[0102] FIG. 2 shows one example of the core 22 based on the configuration of the '727 patent. The example has two posts 26 having an on-center spacing Sp. These are in an inboard face 220 which includes the surrounding surface 38. An opposite surface 222 is shown in FIG. 3 discussed below. Core 22 extends from an upstream end 224 to a downstream end 226 and has lateral edges 228 and 230. The core has a series of through holes 232, 234, 236 that cast posts and/or ribs in the associated outlet skin passageway. In this particular example, the holes 234 and 236 segment a plurality of legs which cast generally parallel passageways to outlet passageways discussed below. At the end 226, the legs are joined by intact material 240 in an end region 242. In this particular example, additional bumpers 56 in the end region hold the surface 220 spaced apart from the adjacent surface 250 (FIG. 3) of the core 24 to ensure that interior wall 252 and outer wall 254 are of a desired uniformity of thickness. FIG. 3 shows a schematic assembly of the cores 22 and 24 in a shell 210 casting an airfoil 212. This is a schematic view and in practice there may be additional cores and more complex shapes of cores. After deshelling and decoring (discussed below), outlet holes 260 (FIG. 4) may be drilled into the trailing end of the passageway as cast by the example core 22 (FIG. 4). In FIG. 4, it is seen how the posts have cast passageways 258 that feed the skin passageway from an associated feed passageway cast by the associated section of the core 24. In a further variation for casting of the outlet passageways 260, FIG. 5 shows a modified core wherein a trailing end portion has been bent outward and extended to embed in the shell.

[0103] Component materials and manufacture techniques and assembly techniques may be otherwise conventional. Thus, a basic prior art sequence may be used of molding the individual core pieces and firing them to sinter (e.g., in a kiln/furnace). In an example wherein the socket is milled, an additional milling step may form the socket recess. An example additional milling step is using a protuberant ball mill to machine the recess after the end milling cuts a generally cylindrical shape or an evenly tapering shape.

[0104] The ceramic paste may be applied (e.g., by injecting into the socket or applying to the tip of the post) and the core pieces may be assembled with posts inserted into the sockets and sufficient pressure applied to displace the paste into the lateral gap 50. The resulting assembly may then heated to cure the paste. For example, it may be fired (e.g., in a kiln/furnace or, perhaps, locally fired such as via torch). Example firing is to a lower temperature than the initial core piece firing and may be below a sintering temperature. Subsequent steps may also be conventional including wax over molding in a wax die to form a pattern, shelling/stuccoing of the pattern, dewaxing and firing to form a shell.

[0105] Alloy may be melted and cast in the shell. The resulting raw casting may be deshelled (e.g., mechanical breaking) and decored (e.g., alkaline and/or acid leaching and/or thermo-oxidative removal) and subject to finish machining and subsequent coating or other steps.

[0106] FIG. 6 shows an alternate joint wherein the relative axial positions of the recesses 90 and 96 are reversed.

[0107] FIG. 7 shows an alternate joint wherein the recesses are nearly axially aligned with each other.

[0108] FIG. 8 shows an alternate joint wherein the socket has a relatively high taper or draft angle. The FIG. 8 embodiment is otherwise similar to the FIG. 1/1A embodiment. Similar high taper/draft variations may be made for the FIGS. 6 and 7 embodiments.

[0109] Although specifically illustrated configurations are shown as recesses having two closed ends within the overlap height, other configurations are possible that still provide the backlocking. For example, at one extreme, the post may effectively have a radius R.sub.P generally uniform from the surface 38 into the overlap region then has a head extending slightly radially outward. Similarly, the socket may have a slightly inward radial projection near the surface 46 (alternatively viewed, there may be an outward recess near the base of the socket). It is thus seen that the key aspects to the backlocking are the portion of the post below the recess 90 and the portion of the socket above the recess 96 can effectively be viewed as local lateral protrusions. However, these alternative embodiments may be less desirable because of any of several reasons. They may have excess radial play once inserted. They may have excess thickness of filler, thereby increasing problems of differential shrinkage and thus potential flash generation.

[0110] Along a majority of a length of the post away from the post recess, a draft angle of the peripheral surface is 0.25. More broadly, an example draft is 0 to 0.50, measured as a half angle rather than a full angle. For a relative shallow taper of the socket, along a majority of a length (depth) of the socket away from the socket recess, a draft angle of the peripheral surface is 0.25. More broadly, an example draft is 0 to 0.50, measured as a half angle rather than a full angle.

[0111] For an example greater taper, along a majority of a length (depth) of the socket away from the socket recess, a draft angle (FIG. 8) of the peripheral surface is about 5. More broadly, an example draft is 0 to 10.0 or 2.0 to 10.0 or 2.0 to 8.0, measured as a half angle rather than a full angle.

[0112] With relatively small draft angles, even if different from each other, the post and socket may have the aforementioned dimensional relationships/proportions along a substantial fraction of the overlap height in the ranges noted above not withstanding that the individual radii change slightly with height.

[0113] However, particularly with a disparity in draft angle, the target relationships may exist over a much smaller fraction of H.sub.O. For example, the draft angle of the socket may be greater than the draft angle of the post. This disparity, for example, causes an increase in cross-sectional area of the gap axially outward towards the surface 46. FIG. 8 shows a minimum radial gap R.sub.GL just before one or both of post and socket begin to curve inward. It also shows a high gap (potentially ignoring gap at the recesses) R.sub.GH at the surface 46. This reduces the sensitivity of the level of the surface of the material 52 relative to the surface 46. For example, even with precise amounts of material introduced, the variations in the height of the bumper/projection/protrusion 56 will influence the depth of penetration of the post into the socket and thus the displacement of material.

[0114] FIG. 8 shows a relatively highly tapered (high draft angle) socket in a second piece receiving a relatively less tapered or untapered post. As discussed above, this leads to a greater gap radial span approaching the surface 46 and thus a greater gap cross-sectional area. This greater gap cross-sectional area reduces prospective overflow or under-flow of the material 52 relative to the surface 46. In this example, axial recess overlap is similar to FIG. 1.

[0115] A broader radial span of the gap with the tapered socket means that excessive insertion will cause a smaller overflow height of material protrusion beyond the surface 46. This provides more favorable manufacturing tolerances for the wall thickness of the wall cast by the gap 60. For example, a slightly short bumper 56 already reduces wall thickness. Because the overflow imposes a further local thickness reduction on the wall, there can be problems. The tapered socket reduces that further local reduction relative to what it otherwise would have been. Similarly, in an under-flow situation where the surface of the material 52 does not reach the surface 46, the height of the burr in the passageway cast by the core 24 is smaller and may be more likely to be within manufacturing tolerance.

[0116] Among variations, other features may be added such as the slots of the '727 patent. Additionally, the principles may be applied to other configurations of core and manufacture technique. Although the example annular recesses are full 360 annulus, the recesses may have other extents and/or the identified dimensions may be present over other extents (e.g., a full annular recess having the identified dimensions over only a portion). Such recesses or the associated dimensions may exist over smaller annular sectors such as at least 8.0 or at least 15.0 or at least 30.0 or at least 60 individually. For essentially full annuli that may be interrupted by some other feature or defect, example angles are at least 300 or at least 330. Relatedly, the post and/or socket may be other than circular in cross-section/footprint and the recess or protrusion (depending on viewpoint as discussed above) may fully or partially circumscribe, representing a similar fraction of perimeter to that described for the circular section or similar reduction in cross-sectional area, etc.

[0117] Examples of such variations in post and/or socket cross-sections/footprints are found in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 18/779,406, Casting Core Post and Socket Joint, of Anthony J. Del Boccio, filed Jul. 22, 2024, (the '406 application). The disclosure of the '406 application is incorporated by reference in its entirety herein as if set forth at length. In some embodiments, the inward reliefs in the post or outward reliefs in the socket of the '406 application may combine with the present circumferential relief to limit the backlocking effect to spaced circumferential locations between the '406 application reliefs (or at least locally substantially reduce it at certain locations) while leaving it fully intact in the alternating locations.

[0118] FIGS. 9-12 show such a post and socket arrangement with both: longitudinally-extending radial reliefs in the post (flats 388 of FIG. 9, relieved relative to intact circular surface (angular span thus actual concave recesses are also possible); and longitudinally-extending radial reliefs in the socket (recesses 430 in FIG. 10). These are shown out of phase with areas 440 of overlapping unrelieved post and socket. These longitudinal radial reliefs improve flow when the post is inserted into the socket and displaces the adhesive or filler. Nevertheless, various embodiments may have only reliefs on the posts or only reliefs in the sockets. The FIGS. 9-12 recesses 90, 96 are shown as less gradual and less arcuate than their FIGS. 1A, and 6-8 counterparts. Nevertheless, they may be alternatively shaped and positioned such as in said counterparts and vice versa.

[0119] The FIG. 9 post 326 cross-section above and below the recess 90 has three evenly circumferentially spaced lobes 380 (FIG. 10) with radial maxima of radius R.sub.PMAX1 at locations 382 and three evenly spaced radial minima of radius R.sub.PMIN1 at locations 384 exactly out of phase with the maxima. The example maxima are intact portions of a circular section (having angular span .sub.CP) that may correspond to the circular section of the baseline post.

[0120] The example minima 384 are centrally along flats 388 (straight lines in the transverse sectional view of FIG. 10). The example maxima are true peaks; whereas, the example minima are not true troughs. True troughs would reflect a local concavity in the peripheral surface. The example cross-section has regions of convexity centered on the maxima transitioning to straight regions centered on the minima. However, when plotted as radius against angular position for 360 cycle, the maxima represent peaks and the minima represent troughs. The example flats may be exact flats or may be substantial flats or may be arcs with substantially greater radii of curvature than that their actual local radii or the radius of curvature at the maxima. Example radii of curvature substantially are at least 500% or at least 1000% of the local radii or the radius of curvature along the maxima. There may even be local concavity at the minima, however that may reduce post strength and the additional surface area may resist flow and if extending into the gap it may further reduce the area of the feed hole it casts.

[0121] The socket 328 cross-section has three evenly circumferentially spaced lobes 420 with radial maxima at locations 422 and three evenly spaced radial minima at locations 424 exactly out of phase with the maxima. The example minima are intact portions 428 of a circular section (having angular span .sub.CS) that may correspond to the circular section of the baseline socket. The example maxima are centrally along recesses 430 (convex outward in the transverse sectional view of FIG. 10) in the wall of the socket. Height-wise, there are overlap subregions Outward of the recess 96 and inward of the recess 90) where both the post and the socket have such fully formed features 388 and 430. The socket maxima are along inward concavities of the surface that convexly transition at circumferential ends to the concavity where the minima occur. The latter may be intact portions of a circle.

[0122] The socket recesses at lobes 420 (FIG. 10) have a peak radius R.sub.SMAX1. The intact circular portions define a socket minimum radius R.sub.SMIN1. The angular spans .sub.CP and .sub.CS are sized so that there is overlap region 440 of intact circular surface portions of the post and socket surfaces which would share local nominal radial gap R.sub.GO with the baseline if engineered therefrom by merely eliminating material at the post flats and socket recesses (e.g., preserving R.sub.P as R.sub.PMAX1 and R.sub.S as R.sub.SMIN1). For this, .sub.CP+.sub.CS>120 for the three-cycle/lobe/recess configuration. example .sub.CP+.sub.CS is 130 to 160, more narrowly 140 to 155 or about 150. An example overlap span of region 140 is 10 to 40 or 20 to 35 or 20 to 35. Example .sub.CP may be slightly smaller than .sub.CS. With the example sum of 150, example .sub.CP is 62 and example .sub.CS is 88. More broadly, example .sub.CP is 50 to 90, more particularly 55 to 80 and example .sub.CS is 60 to 105, more particularly 75 to 95.

[0123] Centered, the radial gap at the post peaks is a radial clearance R.sub.G1 and at the post troughs R.sub.G2. These effectively create two groups of three enhanced radial span channels (radially enhanced portions of the annular gap) 442, 444 to facilitate flow of paste/slurry upon insertion of the post into the socket. Each channel 442 is diametrically opposite an associated channel 444.

[0124] The use of first, second, and the like in the following claims is for differentiation within the claim only and does not necessarily indicate relative or absolute importance or temporal order. Similarly, the identification in a claim of one element as first (or the like) does not preclude such first element from identifying an element that is referred to as second (or the like) in another claim or in the description.

[0125] Where a measure is given in English units followed by a parenthetical containing SI or other units, the parenthetical's units are a conversion and should not imply a degree of precision not found in the English units.

[0126] One or more embodiments have been described. Nevertheless, it will be understood that various modifications may be made. For example, when applied to an existing baseline configuration or manufacture process, details of such baseline may influence details of particular implementations. Accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.