Additive Manufacturing Pages 19 to 24 How to Use Hybrid Additive Manufacturing Images courtesy of SyBridge Technologies. By Greg Nemecek A hybrid AM part is a traditionally manufactured base geometry upon which material is added using various additive technolo-gies. A common AM application in moldmaking is repairing old or worn molds — building up worn areas of a mold or adding new features to an old mold. Different AM processes provide benefits to these applications. For example, directed energy deposition (DED) makes sense for most repair applications that need to build material back up. Powder bed fusion (PBF) is better suited for adding new features to an old mold, such as cooling channels or venting. Most DED technologies follow the mold’s 3D surface, adding consistent, even layers to the worn areas of the mold, providing a more controlled heat affected zone (HAZ). Shops can then machine these areas back to the required shape, dimensions and tolerances. The most common DED systems used in mold repair include a DED laser head and powder/wire delivery system built into a CNC system. This setup streamlines the process by requiring the shop to set up the worn mold in the system once, machine the rebuilt surfaces to yield a clean, even surface and then add material to build up these regions before final machining. PBF can build up multiple features simultaneously but requires a flat surface to build upon, making it unsuitable for many repair applications. If a shop adds new features to a mold, it must add any connections in the original part before printing on top. This part shows hybrid manufacturing. The base was a traditionally manufactured insert on which SyBridge Technologies (previously Action Mold & Machining) printed to add conformal cooling and venting. One group of features finished using sinker EDM. For example, if a shop is adding cooling channels, it must start the in and out lines before printing to align the printed geometry. This approach to adding conformal cooling lines allows the print to align to the base design with sufficient stock material to be machined back to the desired geometry. This can produce the same external shape as the original with improved cooling capability, or it can produce a new external shape if there have been design changes to the tool. There is no single solution for all repair applications, so col-laborating with companies with AM capabilities is key to making the right decision. SyBridge Technologies has PBF technology in-house to guide users through the decision-making process. FOR MORE INFORMATION SyBridge Technologies 616-452-1580 / sybridgetech.com Greg Nemecek, Additive Manufacturing Manager Section cut using wire EDM to display conformal cooling and venting regions. 24 MoldMaking Technology — — JULY 2022