
ACROSSTHEBENCH
To Rail or Not to Rail
One of the most interesting parts of performing a maintenance capability assessment (MCA) in mold plants around the globe is observing the different styles practiced when repair technicians work on molds. When talking
to repair techs about why they like a particular method or tool it is easy to see why they would think there is only one way to do things. It’s simply how they were taught by the older, tenured repair technicians. |
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What Are They? In my old shop, all of our 14 mold repair technicians made use of rails to set and work on molds. The reasoning behind this was that some molds have water lines and other components sticking out of the bottom that makes it impossible for a mold to sit flat on the bench. Rail height was determined by the length of the stuff hanging off the bottom of the mold. Types of Rails
Photo courtesy of Moldtrax. I picked the mold up and gave the bottom a quick pass with my file and a medium stone just to make sure there were no burs, set it back down and proceeded to disassemble it. Gosh—what a discovery. I found the mold plates, although tall and heavy, slid along my bench top quite easily—not nearly as hard as I was told it would be. As I proceeded through the clean and repair of the tool I discovered even more nice things about working directly off the bench top versus rails.
It was so nice being able to work comfortably and with more control that from that day on I would even take a few minutes to remove water fittings and other components allowing most of our molds to sit flat on the bench. The 15 minutes or so to do this was well worth the time and before long—no one in our shop used rails unless it was absolutely necessary—on about 10 percent of our molds. Try it—I think you’ll like it. |
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