
RETROSPECTIVE ROUNDTABLE: HOT RUNNERS/COMPONENTS
Lean Manufacturing Trims Leadtimes
Moldmakers aren't the only ones reducing leadtimes. Component and hot runner suppliers are delivering their equipment and supplies faster to accommodate industry demand.
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Top Ten Things You Would Not Know If You Were Not a Moldmaker
Hot runner and component market leaders take a look at the past decade, and discuss present and emerging trends. GETMOREINFO
For more information visit the MMT Showroom for D-M-E Co. For more information visit the MMT Showroom for DMS. For more information visit the MMT Showroom for Husky Injection Molding Systems. For more information visit the MMT Showroom for PCS Co. For more information visit the MMT Showroom for Progressive Components. For more information visit the MMT Showroom for Synventive Molding Solutions. Over the last decade, as molds have become more complex, so have the systems and components that are used in their design and build. The delivery and pricing pressure is on the manufacturers and suppliers—with quality a given. Hot runner and component suppliers are delivering their goods faster and less expensive; and leadtimes on these items have significantly shrunk. Below, a cross-section of market leaders in these sectors take a look at the past decade, and discuss present and emerging trends. Hot Runner Technology: Industry Changes Molds also have gotten more complex, notes John Blundy, VP, Business Development, Incoe (Troy, MI). “The complexity and variability of injection molding demands continues to require hot runner manufacturers to offer solutions,” he states. “Multi-component, in-mold labeling and co-injection are examples where hot runners and complex controls have provided the ability to perform processes not otherwise possible in a production environment. The good news is this provides growth for our segment of the industry. Ten years ago hot runner use was perhaps 30 percent of all injection molds; today, it’s more than 50 percent in the highly industrialized countries.”
Stack molds have become more prevalent over the past decade and this trend will most likely continue. Pictured is a stack mold centering device. Photo courtesy of D-M-E. According to Dave Lawrence, president and CEO of Speed also is a universal challenge in both market sectors. “Shorter and shorter leadtimes are demanded from mold manufacturers,” Lawrence states. “Faster cycle times are demanded by processors and faster concept-to-finished product cycles are being demanded by the OEMs. From automotive to electronics to medical products, speed wins. Also, the ability to produce more complexity in a mold has resulted in processors looking to build more features into plastic parts and to use those parts in more demanding applications to reduce their costs of manufacturing.” Customers have evolved over the last decade as well. Bruce Catoen, VP Marketing, Business and Product Development, Mold-Masters Limited (Georgetown, ON) notes that mergers, acquisitions, globalization and the evolution of the Internet era have eliminated regional boundaries and created a new, much larger corporate customer. “The entrepreneurial owner/operator who had long-term relationships with his customers and suppliers is disappearing,” Catoen emphasizes. “The new corporate customer demands flawless startups, faster deliveries, on-time delivery to the day, perfect quality, lower and lower prices, global 24/7 service and spare parts, onsite start-up assistance, local engineering support and guarantees on product performance and longevity. “The remaining larger processors have had to search much harder for a sustainable competitive advantage as the industry has commoditized and consolidated,” Catoen continues. “This has resulted in an explosion in complex and specialty processes such as multi-material, co-injection, higher cavitations, thin-walling, gas assist, injection compression and many others.” According to Rebecca Markel, Marketing Director at PCS Company (Fraser, MI), suppliers need to accommodate their customers’ new needs. “Hot runner system suppliers need to provide a global network to service their customers as U.S. moldmakers have partnered with offshore suppliers to survive and offer lower cost solutions,” Markel says. “They also need to offer more for their customers—including online solutions, design guides and downloads in a solid format. Customers today expect price competitive, quality and performance from their hot runner suppliers in addition to technical service, quick delivery and spare parts availability.” Catoen of Mold-Masters agrees. “Hot runner suppliers have responded technically with precise fill balance, larger cavitations, fast color change, better temperature uniformity, complex manifolds and new gate styles,” he notes. “Commercially, hot runner suppliers have developed fast delivery systems, new manufacturing techniques, global support infrastructure and lean business practices, disciplined production processes and more competitive prices.” Fortunately, today’s hot runner systems are designed for faster, easier installations for the moldmaker, according to John Roggenburk, Marketing Manager at Synventive Molding Solutions (Peabody, MA). “Some examples of this include threaded nozzles, and pre-wired and pre-plumbed hot runner systems,” he states. “The use of valve gate hot runners also has become more common. Valve gates provide molders with more control over the process, and require fewer changes to the mold cavity and core to achieve quality parts. Time and cost savings issues have driven this trend.” Roggenburk adds that the use of 3-D CAD designs for mold and hot runner manufacturers has become standard to ease the design integration of the hot runner into the mold. Hot Runner Technology: Specific Product Line Changes “The nozzles and gating methods that hot runner suppliers offer have become more specialized,” Baumann adds. “Ten years ago a nozzle or gating method for one specific niche or performance criteria was difficult to find on the market. Product development is becoming a real science; working with more exotic materials and more sophisticated analysis tools allows us to test nozzles to a degree that was not possible 10 years ago. In turn, this improves performance and reliability of the hot runner. For example, Husky has been working with biodegradable materials such as polylactide (PLA) since 2005 and continues to fine-tune the hot runner for the specific requirements of these materials. Husky introduced the first successful preform 24-drop hot runner for PLA water bottles back in 2005 with a hot runner that uses a different gating method compared to the standard PET-Preform hot runner." Leadtimes Addling to this is Baumann of Husky, who notes that 10 years ago, six- to eight-week leadtimes for a small cavitation hot runner was acceptable, versus as little as a two-week leadtime today.
An example of a much more complex hot runner system used for parts with advanced molding requirements. Photo courtesy of Mold-Masters. Roggenburk of Synventive agrees. “There has been a dramatic reduction in hot runner delivery times since 1998,” he notes. “Back then 10-week deliveries for custom hot runner systems were common. We have reduced standard deliveries on custom hot runners from 10 weeks to eight weeks, then to four weeks (this was a major breakthrough, introduced in 2004) and then to two weeks on many of our systems. The reduction in delivery times has been mostly due to the implementation of lean manufacturing methods. In general this has put in place a much more efficient workflow at the company—streamlining the entire hot runner build process from the initial concept to start of production.” D-M-E’s Lawrence notes that hot runner products have become more cost effective. “They have become both larger and smaller and have the ability to process a wider range of materials more effectively,” Lawrence states. “Thus, leadtimes on many molds have gone from 16 to 18 weeks 10 years ago to six to eight weeks (and less) in today’s market.” Software/Automation Mold Components: Industry Changes Additionally, the industry is much more business-like, according to JR Hommer, Vice-President of Hommer Tool and Mfg., Inc. (Arlington Heights, IL). “Gone are the days when you could ‘gut shot’ a quote and either win big or lose big,” he comments. “Margins are too tight to risk any losses. The aversion to risk also has impacted innovation. Today, when an investment is made in technology or capacity it must be justified with quantifiable return on investment. It takes a businessperson to guide and survive in this industry today and not just a talented toolmaker.” Unfortunately, the number of molds build in the U.S. has declined over the past decade. “Reasons for this include the tightening of product development budgets, optimization of part design to reduce the number of parts and therefore the number of molds required, the number of molds being imported from overseas, and also the fact that entire products are being tooled/molded/assembled overseas,” explains Glenn Starkey, Director of Engineering and Sales for Progressive Components (Wauconda, IL). “Additionally, the simple, open/shut molds are rarer, with thriving U.S. mold builders increasingly specializing in highly complex tools. What that has meant from a component standpoint is that it has become more important than ever to offer mechanisms that save time for the mold builder, and becausethese items are standard, they offer the advantage of being able to be maintained easily by the molder. “Due to the changes both in tooling complexity and overall business conditions, there is an increased need for standardized lifters, collapsible cores, modular sideactions and parting line sequence devices,” Starkey adds. Mold Components: Specific Product Line Changes Adding to these thoughts is Hommer of Hommer Tool. “The equipment has evolved to have the accuracy and repeatability put into the process so that there is less reliance on the skill of the machinist running that equipment,” he says. “This also has facilitated the automation of processes when the human factors were removed or isolated.” Lawrence of D-M-E notes that components have become increasingly less expensive. “At the same time we have provided more value to the customer by enabling faster mold construction times and increased capabilities in the mold,” he explains. Hicks of DMS adds that improved software and equipment has allowed components companies to deliver basic and specialty components faster. “Many mold shops are willing to purchase specialty components that they may have made themselves 10 years ago, but now component suppliers who can quite often make itless expensive quicker and better,” Hicks notes. “Moldmakers need their equipment tied up building molds not components.” Expanding on Hicks’ sentiments is Progressive Components’ Starkey. “We used to see more call-in/pick-up type orders 10 years ago, but now companies are calling mainly for components to suit the more complex situations,” he elaborates. “For simple component orders, they are often sending them electronically from their electronic purchasing system and shipping via UPS in one to two days. In that regard, planning is better than 10 years ago and there are fewer instances of a ‘stop, drop and roll’ order for components for a new tool. “Of course, on the repair side there will always be emergencies and, as a result, we're required to have deeper inventories on the shelf, and an increasingly technical team on the other end of the phone that is ready to assist,” Starkey adds. Azzopardi of D-M-E adds that customers want to work with companies with broad distribution capabilities. “Getting components when and where you want them—anywhere in the world—is essential now and not just a service perk.” The Next Decade
Today’s hot runners and complex controls have the ability to perform processes previously not possible in a production environment. Photo courtesy of Incoe. Hot Runner Market Roggenburk of Synventive Molding Solutions expands on Baumann’s thoughts. “Time to market for tomorrow’s products will continue to shrink,” he states. “Therefore, all industries and markets will continue to push their suppliers and partners for faster response times. This means hot runner suppliers must continue to push to be more efficient throughout the process. We must provide faster design information, and be able to coordinate projects efficiently on a global basis. In addition, we will need to provide faster build times, products that work from the start, and the most responsive service organization to support global production.” Both Catoen of Mold-Masters and Incoe’s Blundy see the consolidation of hot runner companies in the future. “These new companies will offer a broader range of products that will be even more service-based to better address the needs of global customers,” Catoen says. “These companies will fully encompass all technologies surrounding the molding machine. “I also see continued adoption of hot runner technology across the molding industry resulting in an increase from 40 percent to 70 percent market share,” Catoen adds. “Systems that were once complex will become off-the-shelf items through flexible pitch range options and advancements in modular designs. Development in analysis tools will ensure even the most complex applications with demanding resins will be perfectly rheologically balanced.” Markel of PCS takes this one step further, noting, “I see mold industry consolidation resulting in very large ‘super molders and moldmakers’ utilizing state-of-the-art technology to maintain competitiveness. Industry consolidation is a necessity to balance supply and demand requirements and will also ripple through the injection molding industry supply base. The North American industry also will specialize in high tolerance multi-cavity tooling.” Components Market Hicks at DMS would like to see that the plastics market continues to thrive in the U.S. “Those companies that continue to embrace technology, seek new markets/products and remain confident in themselves with respect to theirskills/talents will probably still be here—as well as the companies that improve their cash flow or redefine PPAP terms,” he states. “However, there is no sure thing for anyone. Customer expectation on quality, delivery and pricing will always put component suppliers under constant pressure. I see medical, large and complicated automotive molds, and those products that have an R+D element to it will remain in North America.” Lawrence of D-M-E believes that global factors will influence market forecasts. “Automotive in North America and Western Europe will grow at a much lower pace than the markets in China, India and Eastern Europe,” he states. “The complexity of molds produced in North America and Western Europe and Japan will be lower in numbers but higher in features and capabilities. The most active growth markets overall for molds will be China, India and Eastern Europe (including Russia). Growth markets in North America will be in the areas of medical, agricultural, ‘new’ domestic automotive and energy-related areas. These markets will also grow more rapidly in the Southeast U.S., the Western U.S. and Mexico. This will cause the market to become even more competitive, Hommer of Hommer Tool says. “I believe that in order to survive, our business must continue to innovate to maintain competitive advantages.” Finally, the increasing complexity of molds will result in added business for components manufacturers. “Over the next five years, we'll see less and less molds valued under $100,000 and more molds valued over $500,000,” Starkey of Progressive Components comments. “Highly complex tools for packaging, medical and electronics applications will often feature multiple parting lines, in-mold labeling, in-mold assembly, etc. From a component standpoint, the more typical bill of materials orders for a couple dozen ejector pins, sleeves, core pins, will become less the norm. Molds will more oftenresemble complex machinery,with the purchased component itemscomposed ofa myriad of modular mechanisms. “With this evolution, the following six to 10 years may see moldmakers take on larger portions of the product development for entire assemblies, and they will produce not only complex injection molds as described, but also stamping dies, blow mold tools and die cast dies,” Starkey continues. “To decrease the learning curve in new, specialized tooling niches, partnerships and consolidation will be on the rise.” Starkey is optimistic about the future, concluding, “Looking forward, perhaps the greatest rate of change is behind us, and with a focus on engineering, the region from which a mold originates (and the related cost) may become less of a factor than the engineering approach and reliability, which produces value. “Rather than the giddy cost savings mindset of the past, a sober assessment of the tool's ‘total cost of ownership’ will come to the forefront.” |
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