| What is the issue in hot runner mold? |
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Hot runner molds are great. Everyone knows that. We eliminate runners, grinding them and reprocessing them. So what's the issue? All hot runner molds are not created equal. We have all seen the application where using a hot runner mold resulted in more scrap and more regrind instead of its elimination. Why would this be?
It seems really simple. You heat the channel where the plastic flows, pressurize the injection unit and the plastic flows into each cavity. So what is so complicated? Why wouldn't that just always happen in a repeatable way? Well, this plastic stuff that we push into these wonderful molds simply doesn't behave like normal material. The only thing that we use regularly that behaves a little bit like plastic is catsup. You know what happens with a new bottle of catsup. You try to make it flow—it doesn't. Then, look out—when it flows, it all comes at once! Plastic behaves the same way, but to a much greater degree. We have to step back a little bit and talk about why this happens. It is due to non-Newtonian flow. When plastic flows, the very long molecules that make up plastic align in the direction of flow. This untangles them and drops the viscosity. This allows plastic—which is relatively viscous—to flow much like water. The faster it flows the easier it goes. If a hot runner mold is designed in such a way that flow doesn't initiate in all of the channels at the same time, we have problems. Some cavities fill first and pack hard, and some cavities fill last and pack easily. Also, in a mold that is so-called balanced, where flow channels and directions are all the same from one cavity to another, there is a high possibility that the flow patterns will change over time. This is caused by the on- and-off heating of the tips, causing more or less resistance to flow in different drops over time. The end result: cavities that fill first on one shot do not fill the same on the next shot. Or in other words, the fill balance in hot runner molds tends to change from shot to shot. We term this phenomenon multi-process disease. All hot runner molds potentially have this problem, but to different degrees. The only sure ways to eliminate multi-process disease are to build single cavity molds or use sequential valve gating, which only allows one to flow at a time.
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