
ACROSSTHEBENCH
So You Think You Know
Your Molds?
Keeping molds production ready and reliable is much more dependent upon proactive maintenance measures than reactive habits.
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A mold repair technician’s job has always been to make molds run—any how, any way … just make it run. Intangibles such as technique, methodology, maintenance efficiency, accountability and continuous improvement have never been much of a factor in assessing the performance of a custom repair facility or a proprietary mold repair shop or an individual’s skill level. Performance was based on missed production schedules … period. However, today any company seeking to sharpen its competitive edge realizes that keeping molds production ready and reliable is much more dependent upon proactive maintenance measures than reactive habits. To implement an accurate, efficient repair and to optimize downtime hours, repair technicians must have access to data to quickly be familiarized with the mechanical and performance characteristics of every mold on which they work. Repair technicians should not be expected to pull from memory, data relating to specific issues of maintaining and troubleshooting a stable of expensive molds. Repair technicians operate on and maintain the heart of a plastics manufacturing company. They see, feel and decipher every type of tooling fit, track marks, discoloration, wear and hob—looking for answers to immediate and future issues. To do the job effectively, they need to know not only about the smallest of details such as minuscule tolerances and stack dimensions, but also the predominant, long-term issues molds suffer as a result of design or build features that cause problems during mold operation or maintenance activities. Whether or not a repair shop approaches mold maintenance in a proactive, systematic type environment versus a knee-jerk reactive culture is an extremely subjective question. I am often asked what I consider to be the most important areas of mold performance and maintenance criteria to be used by repair technicians, managers and supervisors. Ten Questions to Determine Level of Data Utilization Be aware that if it is necessary to dig through files of records to manually count occurrences and gather data, then the information in the system is not considered readily available. If you could categorize and measure all of the information buried deep in these filing cabinets of most maintenance shops or a repair technician’s head, you could get the necessary information that would point you in the direction you need to go to be a data-driven shop. Performance and Maintenance Data (broken down by chosen timeframe)
b. Mold distribution of the defect (mold style, product or press related) c. Cavity I.D. or mold position of the defect (position related?) d. All related corrective actions and costs (tooling and labor) resolving the defect
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