| Reunderstand Aluminium Tooling |
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Mistakes have always been around: the world is flat and the sun revolves around the earth— to name a few. The world of manufacturing is no different with its own false beliefs. Today we have the mistakes that aluminum tooling is “junk tooling or for prototypes only”. This is a stereotype that has grown from earlier grades of aluminum—alloys that were gummy, difficult to cut and improperly used in a manufacturing environment. Cost factors are forcing manufacturers and major OEMs to take a second look at aluminum. Back in 1991 IBM did a five-year study on aluminum tooling with many credible findings. Currently, Honda’s ongoing aluminum tooling study is a success and other companies are taking a renewed interest in the cost savings that aluminum has to offer. Unfortunately, old beliefs are hard to overcome. Aluminum tooling is just for prototypes and low volumes. Limited resin types can be used in an aluminum mold prototype. Glass-filled and other abrasive resins can be run with success as long as special care is taken to either hard coat or steel insert critical areas. Glass-filled resins can actually run more efficiently with aluminum due to its consistent thermal conductivity that assists in the flow of resin. PVC is often incorrectly believed to be abrasive, when in fact it is corrosive. That is why stainless steel alloys are chosen over P20. Both stainless steel and aluminum are corrosion-resistant by nature. Aluminum forms a 0.000001 (microinch) self-healing layer as a reaction to oxygen called aluminum oxide. The chromium in stainless steel reacts the same way to oxygen forming a layer called chromium oxide. Some of the newer grades of aluminum have chromium added for even greater corrosion resistance. There are surface hardening processes that work well with PVC that can increase component output. Aluminum cannot be used for production quantities. Aluminum tooling is also perfect for keeping marketplace share when bridge tooling is needed. An added benefit is that if the tool life is exceeded, aluminum is forgiving and easy to maintain or enhance in order to get those last few plastic parts until the hardened steel production tool is ready. Aluminum tooling has limited textures and finishes versus steel alloy tooling. Aluminum tooling has process issues. Can’t make tool modifications to soft tools like aluminum molds. Aluminum tooling cannot handle complex designs. Aluminum tooling is too expensive. In today’s economy and business climate every company that wants to stay lean and competitive in the marketplace needs to seriously consider the cost savings from aluminum tooling. Although there have been many improvements in the grades of aluminum alloys, proper design, tooling and molding practices need to be considered to truly reap the benefits of this alloy. In 35 years of aluminum tooling, the last five have been the most notable due to the attention that aluminum has finally been given. Like most successful innovations that are born from the need to survive, aluminum tooling is not just the bridge to a faster product launch or the cost savings necessary for the planned budget; it is a successful alternative to steel tooling with huge benefits that will continue to advance and influence the future of the plastics industry.
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