
FEATUREARTICLE
How to Work Better, Faster and Cheaper
While moldmakers may have difficulty competing with foreign markets on cheap labor, they can compete by finding new ways to build molds faster and cheaper with high-quality results.
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For more information contact Mark Moss of Synventive Molding Solutions (Peabody, MA) at (978) 750-8065 or via its website at www.synventive.com.
What this means for moldmakers is that mold insert components can now be used in lieu of complete molds for production applications. With the new molding system, moldmakers and molders can rapidly make changes to a product, develop mold inserts to suit the application and ship these components anywhere in the world where a smart molding machine is in operation. Since the system allows the molder to control the packing rate right at the nozzle, moldmakers no longer face the lengthy process of balancing molds before manufacturing commences. The molder can balance and qualify molds and rapidly produce high-quality end products simply by tuning the process with smart molding. In fact, molders simply adjust the pressures at the tip of the nozzle to get optimum fill and packing rates.
Better molding can only be achieved with a real-time, closed loop pressure control system that allows molders independent control of injection and packing pressure at each gate in the mold. One of the principal benefits for the moldmaker and molder is the speed at which the mold can be qualified. The ability to individually create, fill, pack and hold profiles for each cavity in the mold eliminates the time-consuming process of capability studies followed by painstaking adjustments to tool steel in order to qualify individual cavities. In essence, smart molding technology offers the precision and ease of start-up of single-cavity molding in multi-cavity tools. The resulting activity optimizes process results to exceptional levels of cavity-to-cavity consistency. This technology is a melt delivery system that enables a level of control previously unattainable to deliver higher quality, faster leadtimes and lower costs. A moldmaker can show his customers new ways to achieve lower tooling costs while providing faster time-to-market, as well as lower unit costs by introducing them to a modular tooling system utilizing smart molding. By building inserts that are stocked on the shelf, lead and tooling times can be drastically reduced. The moldmaker can thus focus on building intricate core and cavity work, add value and optimize profits.
Telecommunications Opportunities Cell phone and pager manufacturers have found the solution by utilizing rapid tooling methods and combining them with smart molding technology. Utilizing flexible inserts, tool build times can be reduced to one to two weeks, as compared with conventional methods that take eight to 10 weeks. Moreover, different parts can be made in the same mold base - significantly reducing manufacturing costs while maintaining the ability to respond to changes in market demand. Although family tools and modular tooling solutions are not new to the industry, it is the unique capability of smart molding to independently profile each cavity that, when coupled with family molds or multi-cavity systems, facilitates timely and cost-effective implementation. In-field tests have conclusively shown that savings in tooling costs alone can be as much as 40 percent. Other benefits include faster tooling for better leadtimes, lower costs per unit, improved quality (increased CPK values), quick reaction to market trends and better machine utilization. High quality plastic parts demand quality molds; the telecommunications industry demands faster, better and cheaper molded products from their contractors. Creating a high quality modular tooling system coupled with smart molding technology can satisfy both seemingly conflicting demands (see Figure 1).
Staying Current in Electronics In the case of the molding operations for the popular PDA, for example, a 41 percent savings may be realized over a conventional four-cavity molding system (numbers generated by combining tooling and unit costs). With these advantages, U.S. molders can outpace the competition, offering flexibility, speed and the quality that new projects demand. Additionally, with flexible molding, the OEM can conform his assembly operation to the needs of the market, rather than to the conventional injection molding industry (see Figure 2).
All in the Family Ongoing efforts by many firms to enhance family tooling include mold filling analysis, sequential valve gating and adjusting restrictors in cold runners. The methods themselves have proven unacceptable for high quality parts, limiting family molding to static packing and filling applications. New smart molding approaches give the independent control needed to make precise family tooling work, and a new level of attention and respect. The smart molding system - which provides real-time, closed loop control of up to 32 individual drops - is the wave of the future. Smart molding allows for targeting cavities or clusters of cavities to the nominal dimension, greatly reducing cavity-to-cavity variability. The net result is six-sigma precision of single cavity molding, with the advantages of higher cavitation tooling and enhanced machine utilization. Mold rework also is reduced by simply changing the process instead of the mold. The new fully-tested technology has changed both the perception and the reality of family tooling. It enables family molds to produce high quality parts with moldmakers standing to gain a decisive competitive edge over foreign competition by creating new ways to build molds faster and cheaper with higher quality results. Smart molding appears to be a major step toward providing the solution to helping industry at least maintain, if not gain, competitive advantage while enhancing quality and speed.
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