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TEC 315

Injection Mold Design Details

Product design influenced by what type of


mold can be made economically.

Dr. Lou Reifschneider

1
Mold Design Topics
• Basic Function of Molds
• Mold Nomenclature & Operation
• Classification
– Two-plate vs. Three-plate
– Cold runner vs. Hot runner
– Cavitation: single, multiple, family
• Ejection Mechanisms
• Gate Designs
• Venting the mold - avoid gas traps 2
Tasks of the Injection Mold
• Distribute the melt from nozzle to cavity
- sprue, runner, gate, (cavity number)
• Shape part
- cavity design (cores, side actions,…)
• Cool molten resin
- uniformly, quickly
• Eject the part
- reliably, without part damage 3
1 of 2
Additional Tasks for Mold
• Withstand molding forces - no deflection
- maintain cavity shape
• Maintain mold half alignment - no mismatch
- insures cavity shape
• Guide moving parts of mold - no binding
- side actions, stripper plates, twist-off

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2 of 2
Sprue Bushing Basic Mold
Top Clamp Plate
Locator Ring Components
Cooling Lines Cavity, A

Leader
Pin &
Bushing
Core, B
Core
Support
Plate
Return Pin
& Spring
Parallel
KO Pin
Pillar Ejector Retainer Plate
Sprue Puller Ejector Plate 5
Bottom Clamp Plate Knockout Bar 2 Plate Mold
Mold Nomenclature (1/4)
• Top Clamping Plate, “A support plate”
holds “A” side to stationary platen
• Locating Ring, ‘Sprue Bushing Retainer Ring’
locates mold to wrt stationary platen
• Cavity Retainer plate, “A plate”
defines cavity features, holds leader pins
• Core Retainer plate, “ B plate”
forms parting line, defines core features
• Support Plate, “B support plate”
keeps B plate from bending, aligns ejectors 6
Mold Nomenclature (2/4)
• Bottom Clamping Plate, “ Ejector Box Base”
holds ejection system to movable platen
• Parallels, “Ejector Box Rails”
bridge betw B support and Ejector Box Base
• Ejector Retainer Plate
keeps ejector pins traveling with ejector plate,
counter sunk for ejector pins
• Ejector Plate
linkage betw ejector rod and ejector pins
7
Mold Nomenclature (3/4)
• Pillars
support betw Ejector Base and B support
• Sprue Bushing
mating passage from nozzle to mold sprue
• Sprue Puller Pin
beneath cold well, grabs sprue @ demolding
• KO Pin (Knock Out Pin)
pushes part out of mold,
retracts due to ejector retainer plate
8
Mold Nomenclature (4/4)
• Return Pins, safety pins, ejector return pins
forces ejector plate back @ mold closing
• Leader Pins, “guide pins”
hardened, ground, press fit into A plate
-- aligns mold halves
• Bushings
hardened, ground, press fit into B plate
-- bearing surface for leader pin
• Cooling Lines
passages for water cooling of molten plastic
-- location & number affects part warpage
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MOLD OPERATION: READY TO OPEN

Next
Shot
Ready

Part
Beginning
to Freeze

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2 Plate Mold
MOLD OPERATION: OPEN

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2 Plate Mold
MOLD OPERATION: Knock-out Bar Pushes Ejector Plate

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2 Plate Mold
MOLD OPERATION: KO Pins retract (due to spring return)

13
2 Plate Mold
MOLD OPERATION: Mold Closing

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2 Plate Mold
MOLD OPERATION: ready for next cycle

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2 Plate Mold
MUD: 3-D Section View 2-Plate Mold

Sprue Bushing Cavity


Plate
Leader
Pin Blind
Pocket

Blind
Pocket
Cooling Line
Holes Core
Plate

Return Ejector
Pin Retainer
Plate

K.O. Pin Ejector Plate


Holes 16
Sprue Puller
Classification of Molds
• Processed Material
- thermoplastic vs. thermoset
- cooled mold vs. heated mold
• Basic Design
- two-plate vs. three-plate, …
• Number of Cavities
- single, multiple, family
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1 of 2
Classification of Molds
• Ejector System
- pins, stripper plates, lifters, side-actions
• Runner System
– symmetry (family, H pattern, manifold)
– cross-section (round, trapezoid)
– cold vs. hot

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2 of 2
DME Two Plate Mold

1) top clamping plate


2) A plate (cavity)
3) B plate (core)
4) core support plate
5) ejector housing
6) ejector retainer plate
7) ejector plate
8) locating ring
9) sprue bushing
10) return pins
11) sprue puller pin

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Plastics Engineers Handbook, Fig. 7-3
DME Two Plate Mold with Molded Parts

Plastic melt flows


through
sprue bushing,
then into
runners,
then into
gates
before entering
part cavities.

20
Plastics Engineers Handbook, Fig. 7-14
DME Three Plate Mold (alternative)

This cup shaped


product is best filled
from the center.

A three plate mold


permits gating away
from parting plane of
mold while still using a
cold runner delivery
system.

21
Plastics Engineers Handbook, Fig. 7-15
DME Two Plate Mold Insulated Runner

This cup shaped product is


best filled from the center.

To minimize waste, an
insulated runner achieves
the gating advantage of a
three plate mold without
the higher cost of a hot
runner manifold (next
slide).

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Plastics Engineers Handbook, Fig. 7-16
DME Two Plate Mold Hot Runner
Like a three plate mold, a
hot runner manifold
minimizes waste.
Hot tip valves or needle
valves achieve better
packing control than
insulated runners.
Hot runner manifold molds
are the most expensive of
those depicted.
Recommended for high
volume, special gating
applications.
23
Plastics Engineers Handbook, Fig. 7-17
Hot Runner Manifold
by DME

24
Valve Gated
Hot Runner Manifold
by DME

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Part Ejection Basics
• Draft facilitates ejection of part.
• Ejectors placed on moveable half of mold
– core features should be on moveable half to
promote part sticking to this half, not the
stationary half.
• Knock Out (KO) pins most common.
• Lifters used for undercuts.
• Side actions for more severe undercuts.
– Cam action or hydraulic 26
Part Ejection Issues: Draft

What is wrong with


this part design? 27
Ejector Pin Design Detail

K.O. Land
clearance .001”

28
Part Ejection Issues: Ejector Pin Pads

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Part Ejection Issues: Cavity Orientation to Pull

30
Part Ejection Issues: Undercut and Holes

31
Part Ejection Issues: Holes

Hole size depends


upon wall thickness
and draft

32
Part Ejection Issues: External Threads

33
Cam Actuated Side-Action

When mold opens, cam clears


undercut, then part ejected. 34
Progressive Components, www.procomps.com
Gating Systems
Gating trim method
• manual - sprue, tab, disk, spoke, edge
• automatic - submarine, banana, pinpoint
• automatic - hot drop via hot runner system
Cosmetic Concerns?
- consider: banana gate or hot drop

35
Gate Design Rules
• Gate location for acceptable weld lines.
• Location and size to prevent jetting.
• Gate at thickest area of part for maximum
effective packing time.
• Gate thickness from 50% to 80% wall
thickness. Submarine and pin gates ~ 0.03”
to 0.08” or 60% of wall thickness.
• Fiber filled resins - larger gates.
• Start undersized - can always enlarge later.
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Gating: Nomenclature

37
Sprue Gate

Sprue Gate

CORE
Sprue

CAVITY
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Gating: Disk Gate

39
Tab Gate

Cavity Runner

Tab gate

Parting Plane

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Sub-gate
Cavity Runner

Gate Diameter Sub gate

Knife Edge:
Parting Plane
Automatic 20°
Degating

41
~45°
Sub-gate Degating
“Knife-edge” cuts gate
from part during opening
Part

Mold
opens
Subgate

KO Pins Part already


detached

KO Pins retract
& Mold closes

42
Mold Venting
Shut off: seals plastic in with clamp pressure

Air in cavity must be allowed


to escape during injection to
avoid defects.
Vents are placed at the last
points to fill.
CORE
Sprue

Vent gaps vary with resin:


PA 0.00075 in
CAVITY PC, ABS 0.0025 in

Vent: lets air out, not plastic 43


vent gap

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