| What to Consider from Automotive to Aerospace |
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It is no secret that diversification is an essential strategy to today’s mold manufacturers—especially those with heavy involvement in the automotive industry. As a result, automotive mold manufacturers may want to consider branching out into the aerospace market—for tooling, production machining and precision-molded plastics. Both industries have quality requirements, although aerospace standards are more stringent and different materials are used to build the molds. Moldmakers who diversify into aerospace find the barriers to be one of tight tolerance work that can be held over large areas of material, and material that they may not be accustomed to. It is important to be aware of the differences before you consider diversifying. Aerospace opportunities can range from complex injection molded components such as electrical connectors and intricate devices for servicing electronics inside the planes, high-precision tooling, large tools for composite fuselage parts, high-speed precision machining, welding, CMM inspections, and fab or fixture building. Material Complexities During the mold build process the metals used for aerospace molds have complexities that do not come into play when building automotive molds. There also is a trend toward more lay-up tooling as opposed to traditional moldmaking. Lay-up tooling can be manufactured in a variety of materials, and involves a single surface that resin-impregnated composite material layers can be laid upon. Longer Timeframe Stricter Standards Contacting the International Aerospace Quality Group (iaqg.org) is a good starting point. Achieving this certification doesn’t guarantee you will get aerospace business, but it does qualify you so that aerospace manufacturers will start looking at you. Companies like Boeing won’t even consider you if you don’t have this certification. Equipment Needs A Long Road Aerospace molds have to be dead-on right, and it’s a learning process to understand the industry and its demands and complexities—it’s not just a matter of building a different mold. This is a risk-adverse business; and to get this business, the moldmaker needs to take the risk away from the buyer and demonstrate an understanding of the demands of aerospace.
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