
MOLDMATERIAL
Choosing the Right
Aluminum Alloy for
Production Injection Molds
Aluminum may be a better solution than steel after a thorough review of part design, tool design, quantity and type of unfilled, aluminum-friendly resin.
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For more information from Aluminum For more information visit the MMT Showroom for Alcoa Forged Products. For more information visit the MMT Showroom for Alpase. For more information visit the MMT Showroom for Vista Metals . With North American moldmakers and molders driving toward reducing costs, aluminum has made it to the forefront of tooling designers’ sketchpads and is really beginning to draw the question, “What if we tooled this aluminum?”.
This is a production aluminum mold of an industrial pump cover constructed using 7050 aluminum alloy for Custom Molding Solutions, a Rochester, NY-based molder. Images courtesy of Aluminum Injection Mold Company. After a thorough review of part design, tool design, quantity and type of unfilled, aluminum-friendly resin, aluminum may be a better solution than steel. Using steel molds in conventional molding presses has painted most molders into a cycle time corner, meaning there is no way to appreciably reduce cycle time other than using aluminum molds. Lowering the melt temperatures to below what the manufacturers recommend, as some experts are touting, opens the molder up to litigation from part failure with no guarantee cycle time will improve. Aluminum has always been considered the leading material for prototype tooling because of cost and availability, ease of machining and dependability for several thousand shots. Now aluminum has penetrated into production tooling for cost savings benefits in cycle time improvements, improved machining and polishing performance and better process efficiency. Most moldmakers and molders have limited experience with aluminum tooling—some favorable and some not. Those who have enjoyed the success of aluminum tooling are reaping its benefits. Several important facts about aluminum need to be conveyed for the moldmaking process. When compared to P20 steel, aluminum:
It needs to be stated that while aluminum is lighter in weight and faster machining than steel, all aluminum alloys are not created equal. This article is to help differentiate several aluminum alloys used in today's moldmaking shops and assist toolmakers in selecting the appropriate aluminum for their production tool requirements. Not All Aluminum Alloys Are Created Equal On one side of the spectrum, non-heat treated material is ideal for low-strength mold applications. Cast products typically display lower strength and provide excellent dimensional stability. Also, cast alloys provide excellent machinability and minimal residual stress. Though not engineered for high strength, cast material is suitable for some low-pressure injection molds and straight injection molds requiring less than a few thousand shots. On the other side of the spectrum is the high strength, heat-treated wrought aluminum alloys. These alloys are technologically advanced alloys with enhancements in heat treating, aging practice or a combination of both. These products exhibit high strength (relative to cast product), excellent machining and polishing characteristics, as well as dimensional through-thickness consistency. These aluminum alloys are suitable to mold nearly 75 percent of all unfilled resins—including PP, HDPE, Nylon, PET, ABS and PE. Molds manufactured using high strength aluminum have been known to successfully run millions of shots. Obviously, proper tool design, setup, running and maintenance of the mold must be adhered to.
This is a picture of the industrial pump cover with molded in threads and brass inserts. In the middle of the spectrum are what can be referred to as common alloys—such as 2024, 6013, 6061, 7050 and 7075. Common alloys are manufactured at facilities in accordance with the Aluminum Association procedures for manufacturing these materials. Selecting a High Strength Aluminum Alloy for Production Injection Molds
It is interesting that these factors are very much the same ones designers look at when considering P20 for molds. High-strength aluminum is required for a productionized aluminum mold. As an example, Aluminum Injection Mold Company (Rochester, NY) prefers a high strength, heat-treated wrought aluminum alloy for its production molds using the shop’s “AIM FRAME” because of its high quality, consistent through-thickness hardness as well as its strength and durability. Aluminum Injection Mold developed the “AIM FRAME”—which incorporates steel support pillars and an all steel U-box with guided ejection—to create a mold that has all of the thermal benefits of aluminum matched with the durability of a steel mold. The use of these steel support pillars avoids any possibility of overclamping the mold and crushing the part line. A Guide for Available Aluminum Solutions 6013
This is a full production, aluminum mold that includes the “AIM FRAME” steel support pillars, steel DME U-Box and guided ejection. Also included are part line locks, a single drop hot tip and a mold cycle counter. This mold is constructed using 7050 alloy with high strength, heat-treated wrought aluminum alloy (QC-10™) core/cavity inserts. 6061 7050 7075 High strength, heat-treated wrought aluminum alloy mold material (QC-10™) Summary |
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