obsigmatec
Materials
- Jun 23, 2005
- 3
We have a 64 cavity stack mold. It is a family mold so 32 cavities in the first stack make part A and 32 cavities in the second stack make part B. Parts A and B are the two sides of an electrical switch housing. Therefore parts A and B have very similar geometries. The differences are primarily in the interior of the parts where there are additional features on part B for holding electrical connectors. The tool utilizes a hot runner system. The material is polystyrene. The problem - of course - is that Part A and Part B fill out differently and production was constantly fighting the tool to get it to run properly. After a long period of sorting out defects related to this problem, a decision was made to run each side of the tool independently because less scrap was generated. This of course has doubled the amount of time required to produce the parts and significantly increased the cost so now the pressure has come back to engineering to get both sides of the tool running simultaneously again. I've previously had some experience with cold runner family molds and with putting flow inhibitors in some of the runners to balance out the flow. This met with a limited degree of success but now is not possible due to the hot runner system. What other options exist for balancing out a family mold?