Plastic Forming
Plastic Forming
Plastic Forming
Advantages
High production rates are possible. (A typical cycle time for a 3mm
thick part would about 40 seconds)
Injections moulding allows you to produce products with a good
finish to a good consistent quality..
Disadvantages
Very expensive to set up - the tools (the dies or moulds) are
produced to a high degree of accuracy and surface finish.
This is how thermosets are formed. The reaction occurs in the mould
as the granules are heated and compressed. UF or urea
formaldehyde and MF melamine formaldehyde are formed by this
method.
Line Bending
width of course.
Equipments needed in setting-up a blow molding business are relatively higher than
injection molding.
Compression Molding
In this type of plastic molding, a slug of hard plastic is pressed between two heated
mold halves. Compression molding usually uses vertical presses instead of the
horizontal presses used for injection and blow molding. The parts formed are then
air-cooled. Prices of equipments used for compression molding are moderate.
Film Insert Molding
This plastic molding technique imbeds an image beneath the surface of a molded
part. A material like film or fabric is inserted into a mold. Plastic is then injected.
Gas Assist Molding
Also called gas injection molding is used to create plastic parts with hollow interiors.
Partial shot of plastic is then followed by high-pressure gas to fill the mold cavity
with plastic.
Rotational Molding
Hollow molds packed with powdered plastic are secured to pipe-like spokes that
extend from a central hub. The molds rotate on separate axes at once. The hub
swings the whole mold to a closed furnace room causing the powder to melt and
stick to the insides of the tools. As the molds turn slowly, the tools move into a
cooling room. Here, sprayed water causes the plastic to harden into a hollow part. In
this type of plastic molding, tooling costs are low and piece prices are high. Cycle
time takes about 40-45 minutes.
Structural Foam Molding
Structural foam molding is a process of plastic molding usually used for parts that
require thicker walls than standard injection molding. Inserting a small amount of
nitrogen or chemical blow agent into the plastic material makes the walls thicker.
Foaming happens as the melted plastic material enters the mold cavity. A thin
plastic skin forms and solidifies in the mold wall. This type of plastic molding can be
used with any thermoplastic that can be injection molded.
Thermoforming
In this plastic molding process, sheets of pre-extruded rigid plastics are horizontally
heated and sucked down into hollow one-piece tools. When the hot plastic solidifies,
its shape conforms to that of the mold.
Tooling costs are usually low and piece prices vary on the machinery.
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- Blow Moulding:
Blow moulding is the type of plastic forming used to make large quantities of hollow
products, such as bottles, containers and jars. An injection blow moulding machine as in the
animation below can produce bottles of a very high quality and ideal for thin and fat
containers.
Watch this animation of the process below a few times!:
1) The extruder barrel and screw is heated and melts the plastic (polymer). This is then
injected into the mould which would be the shape of the bottle.
2) The plastic (which is around a core rod) is then clamped into the mould which is cooled.
Compressed air then 'blows' the plastic into the mould.
3) After a cooling period the mould opens and the plastic removed, which is now the shape
of the bottle. This would then be fully tested before packaging.
The materials that are usually used:
Polyethylene (Low Density) LDPE, Polyethylene (High Density) HDPE), (LLDPE),
Polypropylene (PP), Polyethylene - Terephthalate (PET), Polyvinyl chloride (PVC)
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- Vacuum Forming:
Vacuum forming is a very common type of plastic forming and many plastic products have
been vacuum formed - such as packaging inside a box which needs to fit the product. The
animation and explanation below shows the basic process involved, for high speed, more
detailed and mass produced the process uses more complicated hydraulic and heat
controls.
Watch the animation below...
1) A plastic sheet is heated until is it soft and can be placed and draped over a mould.
2) A vacuum is then applied which 'sucks' sheet into and over the mould.
3) The plastic sheet is then cooled and removed from the mould - leaving the finished
shape.
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- Line Bending:
Line bending is the process used when a simple bend is needed in a sheet of plastic
(thermoplastic!). The below diagram is a simplified machine but the red line is a hear bar
that heats the plastic along the line to a temperatue that it is soft enough to bend. Once the
bend is made the heat bar is turned off so that the plastic can cool and retain the bent
shape.
In todays manufacturing environment, plastics are being used to make everything from automotive body
parts to human body parts. Each application requires a special manufacturing process that can mold the
part based on specifications. This article provides a brief overview of the different types of molding and
their advantages and applications.
Blow Molding Well suited for hollow objects, like bottles
The process follows the basic steps found in glass blowing. A parison (heated plastic mass, generally a
tube) is inflated by air. The air pushes the plastic against the mold to form the desired shape. Once
cooled, the plastic is ejected.
The blow molding process is designed to manufacture high volume, one-piece hollow objects. If you need
to make lots of bottles, this is the process for you. Blow molding creates very uniform, thin walled
containers. And, it can do so very economically.
Compression Molding Well suited for larger objects like auto parts.
The name of this molding method says everything. A heated plastic material is placed in a heated mold
and is then compressed into shape. The plastic can be in bulk but often comes in sheets. The heating
process, called curing, insures the final part will maintain its integrity. As with other molding methods,
once the part has been shaped, it is then removed from the mold. If sheeting plastic material is used, the