Good Injection
Mold Design Is Essential For Success
The proper design of an plastic injection
mold will increase your chance of success in every way.
Injection molding is difficult at best, a good 3D injection
mold design will give you a solid foundation.
Your mold maker will be confident that the
components all fit, the dimensions all work together, and that
the mold will ultimately function as it should.
The injection molding engineer will have
confidence in the injection mold design and the operation of
the mold itself. You molder won't be second guessing the design
and it will help him process the parts.
Most of all, your customer will be delighted
with a clean, flash-free, dimensionally correct plastic
part.
A good design must be practical. The mold maker
must be able to produce the components in a logical, orderly
manner to make money. Often, close tolerance dimensions are
specified when a much looser tolerance could have easily done
the job.
Take an ejector pin plate, for example.
Everyone knows that the thickness is basically
irrelevant, but usually the dimension given is a close
tolerance size. An experienced toolmaker will just
ignore the tolerance and proceed, but nowadays, with
the specialization of tasks in the shop, a less skilled
operator would waste precious time holding an
unreasonable tolerance.
The 3D geometry must be clean. The fast pace of mold
making today makes it essential to have efficient,
reliable software. The days of vague sketches, or
toolmakers making up the design as they go are long
gone. There are many excellent companies that offer
high end software programs for designing molds, dies,
and just about any kind of tooling you can imagine.
CNC machines need clean geometry to run
properly. If the design is sloppy and the translation
of different software messy, the end result will show
it. Plus, the operator will have a much easier time
running the programs with clean geometry.
The design must be clear in it's function. It is
maddening for a plastic injection mold
maker to spend hours deciphering what the designer
means. Information that is assumed or omitted can delay
the construction by days and cause unnecessary errors.
Why should a toolmaker spend time looking up
information that was right in front of the designer at
one time?
It is always much easier to include
notes or details that show what is required than to
search it out later on. Once the design is in process,
and the information is available, why not simply give
the mold maker the same information? For example, a 3D
drawing can visually clarify many questions.
What about injection mold gate design?
Here is a review of
how to design gates and runners in an injection mold. Learn
about tunnel gates, banana gates, tab gates and more.
Find out about mold flow from this
video
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There are many considerations to take into account when choosing a CAD CAM system. Learn what is required in a system, how to make the best choice for your own particular needs.
A simple audio video demo of the injection molding process for beginning mold designers. Time spent understanding every aspect of injection molding is time well spent.
One of the best injection gate designs is the cashew or banana gate insert. These inserts can save time and money in construciton and maintenance of your plastic injection mold.
A plastic injection mold design checklist can be very helpful to avoid overlooking basic aspects of mold design. Even the best can forget or omit important details.