Finally, the rest of the company can secretly
learn about plastic injection molding
Sometimes you just have to nod your head and pretend that you know what it
is they are talking about. On the other hand, it sure would be nice to really understand how plastic
injection molding works and what all those terms mean.
Often, terms like overmolding, two-shot molding, galling, hobbed-in, coined, toasted, NFG,
shut-off, etc, etc, are just taken for granted. And usually, people don't like to reveal that they just don't
know.
Really, it is in everyone's best interest to truly have a fundamental grasp of the how and why of plastic injection
molding. The explanations offered here are not technical, but rather a general idea of the concepts.
This page is for the "rest of the company"
Some of the processes involved in plastics molding
and moldmaking are easy to grasp, others are downright mysterious to an outsider. Click on any process below to
learn more.
Of all the methods used to produce a plastic injection mold, EDM is the least
understood. How can a non-technical person grasp it when you usually can't even see what is going on? Since the
workpiece is usually submerged in a tank of smelly, oily fluid, who could know what it's all about?
The main reason to have a basic understanding of EDM is because it is the most essential process
involved in plastic injection moldmaking. Before EDM, many operations were extremely difficult and time
consuming.
Other names for EDM are: ram EDM, ED, spark erosion, and burner.
What about WEDM or wire
electrical discharge machining?WEDM is sort of a cousin to EDM, in that it was developed quite a bit later.
Wire EDM was originally
thought to have a very limited application in plastic injection moldmaking, but it has proven to be
indispensable.
Mold designers have become very creative in applying WEDM to build injection molds. In the
not-so-distant-past, much of what is "wired " was done on surface grinders. This was very tedious and difficult,
requiring a high level of skill and expertise.
Much of what is done with WEDM was simply impossible otherwise. The shapes and contours attainable
are sometimes only possible with this technology.
How Does a Mold Actually Work Anyway?
A picture is worth a thousand words; you can "watch" a mold in action
here.
"Thank you for contributing
your recent articles for our AMBA newsletter. They are well thought out, informative, helpful
and written with a no-nonsense, common sense approach."
The Editors of
The American Mold Builder, the official publication of the American Mold Builders
Association
"Friendly, professional and always willing to help, Randy is an absolute
pleasure to work with. His articles are well written, highly informative and relevant." –
Clare Swaffer, Assistant Editor, Journal of the Institute of Management
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