| How to mold Medical parts |
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Medical parts have different requirements than other molded articles, and as a result tooling engineers over the years have pioneered new mold materials, coatings and mold maintenance practices. For example, a typical luer fitting is used for making a secure, leak-proof attachment with tubing connections in medical devices and other instruments. These small connectors frequently have undercuts, and when they do, there are considerable cost and risk implications for the molding of these parts. However, practices are evolving and tooling engineers have begun using a single, expanding cavity component as an alternative to slide mold traditions of the past. Containing the part’s undercuts within an expandable cavity results in a mold that is smaller and simpler, with less moving parts. Design time is reduced and mold construction hours are less. With a smaller mold, lower hourly press rates result, and when a mold is less complex, it is easier and less costly to properly maintain. Slide molds require lubrication, introducing opportunities for part contamination, while an expandable cavity requires no such grease. And rather than nesting round parts within long slides, more conformal cooling and a more balanced runner system can be achieved by using a component that forms the part concentrically. Expandable cavities are constructed in an expanded position, meaning that during molding they are pulled back against a striker ring and collapsed inward. For ejection, the component is staged forward, which allows the segments of the expandable cavity to expand outward. This releases the undercut and the part is then ready for ejection. They are commonly staged forward during mold open to enable the fastest possible cycle time. The complexity of the second mold wasn’t the only criterion that had to be met, but there were also space considerations and a tight delivery time to think about. “The expandable cavity system was really the only option,” Steven notes. “We had worked with several collapsible cores in the past and have always been quite happy with those, so I was confident the expandable cavity system would work just as well. The beauty of the expandable cavities is that there is really no way to crash the mold.” The project was a success, and Steven said his customer was very satisfied. “My customer couldn’t have been happier with the mold,” he says. “They were actually surprised when we completed the project without any design change requests.” In medical molding, the stakes are high. The ramifications that are on every tooling engineer’s mind can cause one to default into building the next tool much like the last tool. However, beyond the cost savings of a smaller and more straightforward mold build, containing the part’s undercut details within a single component ensures part accuracy, optimal cooling, greaseless molding, and dramatically simplified mold maintenance. These advantages reduce risk and liability over the course of a medical mold’s lifetime.
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