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"I'm a great moldmaker. I know my trade. My company has great people, the best equipment and we can cut anything. We know how to design a mold and build up complex hot runner systems. Anything you want in a mold we can do. We are proud of ourselves. We also can deliver quickly. All we want to do is to be able to get a fair price for our tools, send them to the molder and get paid. What else should we expect?" That's the moldmaker's point of view. If you are typical in the moldmaking trade, you love to cut steel and you know how to do it. You know all the normal conventions and tricks of the trade, but it's not enough. In today's world you have to put on the customer's moccasins and stand by the molding machine and think like he does. The molder that orders your mold is under tremendous strain today. He has to deliver good parts quickly. He must deliver 100 percent good parts in a lean, just-in-time environment, which means a lot of mold changes, short leadtimes and shrinking margins. What the molder needs from you is a ready-to-go mold. Defining the Ready-to-Go Mold Wow! Well, if molds are properly built and properly trialed this can and must be accomplished if a molder is to stay competitive. If you want your customers to survive and thrive in this market, you must be a partner for ready-to-go molds. Mold Tryout Robust molds mean more business for and from your customer. All of these things happen if the mold is given a wringing out early on. If you were a NASCAR fan you wouldn't expect to put a car together, start it up, rev the engine a few times, drive around the block and expect to put it directly into a race. Obviously it must be trialed. It must be pushed harder than it is going to be used in the race. It must be tweaked and finalized so that on race day it is ready to go and not just built to print and sent off to the track. What are the principles of a rigorous tryout? The rigorous concept is to challenge a mold early and avoid problems in production. You will treat the plastic in accordance with manufacturer's recommendations. In other words, you are not going to do anything bad to the material like overheat it. This means that when you try out a mold, you must set everything as conservatively as possible. Plastic Temperatures You should think of the front zone of the molding machine and the hot runner as a thermos bottle, which keeps the melt at proper temperature. By the time the material gets to this location it does not have to be heated further, but should simply be maintained at the proper melt temperature until transferred into each cavity. Only by doing initial tryouts with all temperatures set this way can the capability of a hot runner system be tested. If the mold can't be run this way, someone should dig in and find out why. In the long run this will get a mold to the customer that doesn't cause splay, black specks and other issues that can easily be covered up by your wizard tryout person who can jack temperatures and squeeze a good part out of a half-baked mold. Filling the Mold Separating the fast fill from the sudden stop uses up the inertia of the fast flowing plastic before the cavity is full. The opportunity to look at fill balance is available by making a fill only shot where the mold is filled to a point of 90 to 95 percent. The Instrumented Mold Pressurizing the Mold It is important that any new mold be packed to a minimum pressure of 3000 psi or 200 mpa at the end of the cavity. Any mold that cannot be pressurized to this degree at the last area to fill will most likely be problematic. This does not always mean that every mold is run at this pressure. In some cases it might be run at a lower pressure to get dimensions or save material; however, the 3000 psi minimum is a really good number to ensure that there is sufficient pressure to keep the short shots out of the system. It is important to also know that the mold can be run at this pressure, or higher if necessary. The higher the mold can be pressurized without adverse effects, the better the tool is built. In large molds it is sometimes difficult to achieve this result and mold builders are pretty upset when their mold fails. However, once you figure out the cause and fix it, you're happy because not only did you learn something, but your customer likes the mold, which is one of the keys to success in this industry. Seal the Gate Oftentimes reality is different. Looking at pressures in the mold and seeing whether or not they are maintained after hold pressure is removed is the simplest, most effective way to determine gate seal. While weight can be used in many situations, it is no substitute for seeing what is going on when the injection pressure drops. It also is important to look at the balance of packing—not just of fill. Looking at the pressure gradient across the mold or across cavities provides an understanding of why some areas or parts are different. Shrinkage is inversely related to the pressure during packing—more pressure in the cavity means less shrinkage; less pressure in the cavity means more shrinkage. Cooling Knowing the actual temperature of the mold at every key location gives you an eye into how each area of the mold is cooled. If each area of a mold is at its proper temperature during a mold tryout then all that is necessary is to duplicate and maintain it during the molding process. Only by generating information regarding the mold surface temperature can you ensure that you have a ready-to-go mold that is adequately cooled. You then have enough data to duplicate cooling when you take the mold to production. Run to Cycle When you get to this point, you can start to think about releasing the mold for a qualification run. Most molds are simply shot with a few shots then sent to the molder. The difference between the ready-to-go mold and those that are simply thrown over the wall is the difference between those that show up and those who win at Daytona. What kind of pit crew do you want to be for the molder? It might make the difference between surviving and thriving in these demanding times.
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