9 Ways to Reduce Resin in Automotive Injection Moulded Parts | RJG Blog
There are a lot of ways to reduce how much material is in your automotive parts—some easier than others. Here are 9 of them:
1. Select material type when designing the part
The material type should be decided upon and taken into consideration in tandem with designing the part. The type of material will greatly affect how it performs inside the mould and what features need to be present in the design in order to make it as efficient as possible.
2. Use good manufacturing practices when designing the part
Design is key and can make or break the project before it even begins. Techniques such as coring out thick sections when applicable to reduce part weight should be taken into consideration. The runner and gate size and location are vital as well.
3. Perform mould simulations
Mould simulations allow for inexpensive investigations into potential part designs before the mould is constructed. The risk of altering a part design is lowered when the process capability is simulated beforehand.
4. Use processing technology
The utilisation of a process control system (such as CoPilot®) and in-cavity pressure sensors allows you to see what’s happening inside of the mould before the part is ejected. That means you can create consistent processes that result in high-quality parts again and again without the need to sort through scrap.
5. Use sequentially valve-gated hot runner systems
A valve-gated hot runner system, in most cases, removes the scrap of a cold runner system due to the gate located on the part surface. Eliminating this sprue from every part produced adds up very quickly.
6. Train your team
Training gives processors knowledge to optimise the moulding processes. This can result in avoiding costly processing strategies (or lack thereof) that needlessly increase part weight.
7. Use gas-assist moulding
Gas assist is a process where nitrogen is injected into a thick part to hollow it out. This makes the part lighter by packing from the inside out, creating a hollow channel in the interior.
8. Use foaming agents
Foaming agents are a category of chemical additives mixed into plastic resin. When the resin or foaming agent is injected into the mould, the foam will expand and create hollow cellular structures inside the thicker regions of the part. This essentially packs the part from the inside out, resulting in much lighter parts. This process is also known as low-pressure moulding.
9. Use DECOUPLED MOLDING processing
DECOUPLED MOLDING separates pack from hold in the injection moulding process. This eliminates the effects that viscosity shifts can have on the process, building consistency in part quality. It streamlines the process to make it as efficient as possible in all ways, including finding the perfect balance of material for each part.
Conclusion
Learn more and discover how to reduce materials in automotive parts with our latest white paper.
Read more from RJG here.
RJG
+44 (0)1733 232211
Website
Email