
FEATUREARTICLE
How to Use Thermal Imaging for Mold Approval
Using thermal imaging to look at any part of the process and know the actual hot and cold temperatures and their locations can give moldmakers an edge over the competition.
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For more information contact Samuel Belcher of Sabel Plastechs, Inc. (Cincinnati, OH) at (513) 553-4646.
Thermal imaging came out of the military and it is used today by the military in heat-seeking missiles, satellites, etc. It also is used in everyday industry for measuring temperatures in steel mills and foundries. Some companies even use it to look at their hot runners for even heat.
Thermal Imaging Cameras The camera weighs approximately four pounds, and uses a power cord or a camcorder battery, which is good for about four hours. Anyone can use the equipment efficiently in about ten minutes after reading the instructions and using the camera to look at a cup of coffee or a glass of water, etc. The heat is seen through the eye of the camera. Cooler temperatures will appear blue, with the warmer temperatures moving to red, then to yellow and then the hottest temperature will appear white on the camera's infrared picture on the reverse side of the camera. It will show the highest temperature it sees; however, by moving the cursor you can read sixty-four temperatures within the window in which you are focused. If you desire a photo of the object being viewed, you merely focus the camera, depress the button and the image transfers to the flash card within the camera. Or you can connect directly to a computer and print out the picture of heat you want to save. All of the temperatures within the picture can be brought up from the data. Through the use of thermography you can now look at any part of your process and know the actual hot and cold temperatures and their locations. What better way to check out an injection mold or blow mold and store this knowledge for future mold designs? What better way to go into a customer's production plant and trouble-shoot the process? We all have been in a situation where the mold is questioned or the thermalator or chiller is questioned. You can check your mold cooling or heating sections on your shop floor, as well as in actual use. It can be used as a selling tool, as you can send a photo with the mold to your customers. It also can be used as a training tool for new mold designers to allow them to design the best cooling circuit for a mold design. You can look at your hot runner designs and the manifold and have factual data on the mold, runners, sprues, etc. Everyone is seeking better molds, faster cycles, uniform shrinkage -something to allow your customer to come to you rather than your competitor, whether he is down the street or around the world.
How It Works If you don't know the correct emissivity of the item to be viewed, you can place a piece of masking tape on the object and measure its temperature using the camera. Normal masking tape has an emissivity of 0.95. You can read the temperature of the tape and then move away from the tape and read the temperature. You can then change the emissivity number until the two temperatures match. Once this is completed, record the emissivity setting for the material you viewed and start a database for emissivities and the substrate you wish to view for temperature. There also are charts and graphs published by infrared optical pyrometers to which you can refer and store in the camera. In looking at various production molds, injection mold temperatures have been found to vary from cavity to cavity by 15'F. In blow molds, hot and cold spots have been noted with over 40'F variations. In looking at hot runner manifolds, more than an 85'F difference has been noted from the center to the outer runners in the manifold. It is no wonder different shrinkages take place in different cavities and large parts have warpage or sink. The plastic mold industry now has a valuable tool that removes guesswork as to placement and size of cooling/heating channels, heat in the manifold, and residual heat in the molded product, as well as a niche to separate one mold shop from another that uses guesswork or "the way we always did the design." Never before has the plastic industry been under the gun to lower costs and improve the bottom line than it is today and this will continue in the future.
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