TECHNICAL GUIDES & IFU'S
- Jensen Advantage Tech Guide
- Jensen Aztec Tech Guide
- Jensen Blaze Tech Guide
- Jensen Castell Tech Guide
- Jensen Classic IV Tech Guide
- Jensen Endurance Tech Guide
- Jensen Equity Tech Guide
- Jensen Foundation Tech Guide
- Jensen Integrity Tech Guide
- Jensen J-3 Tech Guide
- Jensen J-7 Tech Guide
- Jensen JA Tech Guide
- Jensen JC Tech Guide
- Jensen JCB Tech Guide
- Jensen JCBD Tech Guide
- Jensen JIV Tech Guide
- Jensen JIV-PF Tech Guide
- Jensen JLCB Tech Guide
- Jensen JMC Tech Guide
- Jensen JP5 Tech Guide
- Jensen JP5 w/au Tech Guide
- Jensen JP-80 Tech Guide
- Jensen JP-I Tech Guide
- Jensen JP-II Tech Guide
- Jensen JPW Tech Guide
- Jensen JRVT Tech Guide
- Jensen JRVT-PF Tech Guide
- Jensen JWE Tech Guide
- Jensen JWG Tech Guide
- Jensen JYE Tech Guide
- Jensen Overture Tech Guide
- Jensen Pulse N3 Tech Guide
- Jensen Security Tech Guide
- Jensen Sentry Tech Guide
- Jensen SL-40 Tech Guide
- Jensen Solution Tech Guide
- Jensen Stability Tech Guide
- Jensen State Tech Guide
- Jensen Superior Tech Guide
- Jensen Superior Plus Tech Guide
- Jensen Verity Tech Guide
- Jensen Alloy Chart
- Jensen Finishing & Polishing Guide - Yellow Ceramic Alloys
- Jensen Oxide Color Chart
- Jensen Standard Torch Adjustment Guide
- Jensen Wax Conversion Chart
- Jensen Pre-Ceramic Solder Guide
- Jensen Post-Ceramic Solder Guide
SELL SHEETS & BROCHURES
RECORDED WEBINARS
- Alloy: A Technical Focus – PFM Framework, Design, Standard and Implant
- Alloy: A Technical Focus- Finishing and Soldering
- CTE: Using the Right Alloy with the Right Porcelain
- Alloy: A Technical Focus- Gold Crowns Made Simple and Predictable
- Casting Proficiency Skills – Spruing
- Casting Proficiency Skills – Wax To Alloy Calculations and Spruing
- Alloy: A Technical Focus - When Good Metal Goes Bad
- Alloy: A Technical Focus Palladium Alloys
- Casting Proficiency Skills – Burnout, Casting, and Torch Adjustment Temperatures
- Alloy: A Technical Focus - Combating Dark Oxides
- Silver: Why You Should Consider Using It in Your Lab
- Porosity Case Studies: Common Problems with Same Case Demonstration Solutions
- Alloy: A Technical Focus – Porosity
TROUBLE SHOOTING
Short Castings or Incomplete Castings
- Check Wax Thickness: Should be 0.3mm minimum. Bridgework is typically waxed to 0.5mm minimum. - Check Burnout Temperature: Should be within 25°F of our recommendation. If everything else checks out, raise in 25°F increments. - Casting Force: For spring wound machines, typically use 2 turns for C&B gold and high gold PFM, and 3 turns for Au-Pd, Pd-Ag, high palladium, and Ni-Cr. While miscasts due to insufficient force are more common, miscasting can result from excessive force due to mold gas back pressure. Broken arm should swing easily. - Spruing: Smooth crucible formers improve castability. sprue for metal flow. No more than ¼ inches investment over the tops of patterns.
Rough Castings
- Debubblizer must be dried prior to investing. Wet debubblizer can contribute to investment breakdown. - ONLY mix investments with special liquid and DISTILLED WATER. More investment related problems are caused by the use of tap water than you would possibly believe. - Check burnout rates, temperature and hold times. Watch out for excessively slow or fast rates, extra-long hold times, or extreme temperatures - all can contribute to investment breakdown. - Check investment mixing technique. Specifically, spatulation time should be within recommendations (typically 1-2 minutes). Special liquid concentrations should be within recommendations as well. - Follow recommendations for setting time. Do not rush setting time, and do not remove crucible former prematurely. - Look for trends. For example, are all castings rough or just some? Which ones? Those invested in the morning or the evening? Singles or bridges? Those from small diameter rings or large ones? etc. - Keep separate mixing bowls for gypsum and phosphate materials. - Is the inside rougher than the outside? Try a different die lube. - If the problem came on suddenly, make a casting from all new metal. You may have a contaminant.
Castings too tight
- Increase the concentration of Special Liquid. - Decrease the total liquid volume 0.5ml. - Use an extra layer of ring liner.
Castings too loose
- Decrease the concentration of Special Liquid. - Increase the total liquid volume 0.5ml.
Porosity
- Shrinkage porosity irregular in shape, usually in the thicker sections and up near the sprue. Spongy appearance to the metal. - Improving the spruing will solve 95% of the shrinkage porosity problems that technicians encounter. - Excessive burnout temperature will contribute to shrinkage porosity. - Gold C&B alloys - 900-1200°F - Silver-Palladium C&B alloys - 900-1200°F - Gold-Platinum PFM alloys - 1300-1400°F - Gold-Palladium PFM alloys - 1400-1550°F - Palladium and Palladium-Silver PFM alloys - 1400-1550°F - Excessive casting temperature will contribute to shrinkage. Improve the torch adjustment and check your casting indicator.
Gas Porosity
- Round in shape, no specific location on the casting. Frequently subsurface. - Check your torch adjustment and tip condition. Poor adjustment or flame condition is the most common cause of gas porosity. - Preheat crucible with torch prior to placing alloy in the crucible. - Replace worn crucibles. - Always add fresh metal when casting. - Ensure complete burnout. - Do not overheat. With most alloys, we cast when the alloy becomes a ball that no longer sticks to the sides of the crucible when we jiggle the casting arm. With Castell and State, we cast before the alloy forms a ball. Nickel-Chrome alloys should be cast after the ingots slump (never break the oxide on Ni-Cr!).