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====Tilt filling{{Anchor|Tilt casting}}==== ''Tilt filling'', also known as ''tilt casting'', is an uncommon filling technique where the crucible is attached to the gating system and both are slowly rotated so that the metal enters the mold cavity with little turbulence. The goal is to reduce porosity and inclusions by limiting turbulence. For most uses tilt filling is not feasible because the following inherent problem: if the system is rotated slow enough to not induce turbulence, the front of the metal stream begins to solidify, which results in mis-runs. If the system is rotated faster it induces turbulence, which defeats the purpose. [[Durville (metallurgist)|Durville]] of France was the first to try tilt casting, in the 1800s. He tried to use it to reduce surface defects when casting coinage from [[aluminium bronze]].<ref>{{Citation | last = Campbell | first = John | title = Castings practice: the 10 rules of castings | pages = 69β71 | publisher = Butterworth-Heinemann | year = 2004 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=MS-JFA04n0QC&pg=PA69 | isbn = 978-0-7506-4791-5 | postscript =.}}</ref>
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