GrumpyPlasticBastard
Materials
- Jun 10, 2010
- 29
We keep track of our machine settings, for a given viscosity of the material.
Say our viscosity is 28MU, I have over a dozen sheets showing that we ran at a historical high of 365 for the mold temp and a historical low of 340. No notes from the operator no numbers in regards to scrap.
Go to start up with a fresh batch of 25MU, same as last time. Started at 355 degrees mold 195 water... Nothing but bubbles and cracks.
Over the course of an hour I dropped the temps nearly 15 on the mold and 10 on the water. 18 scrap pieces. That's too many on this machine.
Then it hit me. I went back and looked at the property sheet from the supplier for this batch, as opposed to last batch.
There is MUCH more to the material than just viscosity.
Turns out that the section marked "modulus 300%" and the one labeled "Tensile" way different than the previous batches. The Mooney Viscosity, the three T-test columns and the two "G" columns were within 2.
I went back through our historical file and matched up historical setup sheets with the material data sheets for a given lot of rubber.
New policy is to match the material as close as possible using this data, not just match the setup sheet to the viscosity number.
Looking over the data, I now understand why we had such wild swings in machine settings for a given viscosity range.
No doubt some of you are shaking your head and laughing, because this is obvious to you... others, I hope I have passed on a valuable tip for you.
----
BFL Dreamworks
"If we don't have an answer we'll get one"
Say our viscosity is 28MU, I have over a dozen sheets showing that we ran at a historical high of 365 for the mold temp and a historical low of 340. No notes from the operator no numbers in regards to scrap.
Go to start up with a fresh batch of 25MU, same as last time. Started at 355 degrees mold 195 water... Nothing but bubbles and cracks.
Over the course of an hour I dropped the temps nearly 15 on the mold and 10 on the water. 18 scrap pieces. That's too many on this machine.
Then it hit me. I went back and looked at the property sheet from the supplier for this batch, as opposed to last batch.
There is MUCH more to the material than just viscosity.
Turns out that the section marked "modulus 300%" and the one labeled "Tensile" way different than the previous batches. The Mooney Viscosity, the three T-test columns and the two "G" columns were within 2.
I went back through our historical file and matched up historical setup sheets with the material data sheets for a given lot of rubber.
New policy is to match the material as close as possible using this data, not just match the setup sheet to the viscosity number.
Looking over the data, I now understand why we had such wild swings in machine settings for a given viscosity range.
No doubt some of you are shaking your head and laughing, because this is obvious to you... others, I hope I have passed on a valuable tip for you.
----
BFL Dreamworks
"If we don't have an answer we'll get one"