| What is The Cleaning Culture in mold cleaning? |
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Mold cleaning is a process where major maintenance bottlenecks often occur because molds are pulled faster than they can be cleaned and made production-ready. I have visited plants where molds waiting to be cleaned line hallways and toolrooms, taking up valuable bench space.
Many times, in order to meet production demands, molds get reset dirty or the cleaning process is rushed, which subjects tooling to more damage through hurried handling. The question is asked, "Can we run it the way it is, or does it really need to be cleaned?" In companies where firefighting is the accepted culture, the mold will be reset and started; if all the parts come out clean, it runs. Once this happens a few times, management comes to assume that molds need to be cleaned only when the residue level is bad enough to migrate out onto the part, or until the mold locks (galls) up. Some shops handle cleaning chores by enlisting non-skilled employees or toolroom apprentices to wash tooling and plates as quickly as the repair technician can take them apart. This practice works, unless the product has critical flash, dimensional or aesthetic specifications, or the mold has a history of maintenance, reliability or quality issues. It is difficult for the repair technician to accurate troubleshoot mold and part defects when all the track marks are washed off from the tooling and plates. Standardize At specified cycle frequencies Using specific instructions for varying levels (in-press, wipe down, general, major) After troubleshooting mold and part defects After repairs have been made After new tooling has been engraved with position number and has been installed All molds should have in-press servicing procedures, including frequencies, and a maximum cycle count set that is strictly adhered to. A number of areas are critical to reliable production, including the internal grease level; the condition of gear racks, sliding cam blocks, internal pins and bushings, and other moving components; water line and bubbler contamination or blockage; manifold weepage; rust and corrosion from water leaks; or condensation. Excess grime can cause problems in many areas of a mold that won't be first flagged by residue leaching out onto the part. Attitudes However, a top-shelf toolmaker is usually not assigned to clean molds. This responsibility is often placed in the hands of a technician who is not familiar with the mold-specific defects and function, or the critical seal areas of the tooling. Doing so will often create continuous mold performance issues and inflate the tooling budget through the addition of dings, burrs, rounded-over edges, premature plating or steel removal and mixed up tooling. These problems, in turn, can ignite the fires that are fought in a reactive system that does not monitor or count defects to correct root causes.
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