The injection molding process was invented in 1872.
Since then, the injection molding business and the plastic industry has
ballooned into a multi billion dollar business venture. In fact, thirty
two percent of plastics by weight are processed through injection
molding. Injection molding has greatly helped in making the US economy
boom because through it, cheap and durable consumer and industrial
items essential to almost all industries is made possible.
Components of the injection molding machine
The
injection molding machine converts granular or pelleted raw plastic
into final molded parts through the use of a melt, inject, pack and
cool cycle for thermoplastics.
A basic injection molding machine
is typically composed of the following: injection system, hydraulic
system, mold system, clamping system and control system. The clamping
tonnage and shot size are both used in identifying the dimensions of
the injection molding machine for thermoplastics, which is the main
factor in the whole process. Other consideration include rate of
injection, pressure, design of screw, thickness of the mold and
distance between tie bars.
Functions of the machine
The
injection molding machine can be classified into three categories,
namely: general purpose machines, precision/tight-tolerance machines
and high-speed thin-wall machines. All three types require auxiliary
equipment to function. These support equipment includes dryers (resin),
material handling equipment, granulators, mold temperature controllers
and chillers, part-handling equipment and part-removal robots.
There
are a lot of companies specializing in quality injection molding, but
they are not all the same. The best ones fast, flexible and customer
driven both for large and small quantities. These companies usually
have state-of-the-art facility with full scale thermoplastic and
thermoset capabilities, computer-aided manufacturing, skilled machine
operators and quality assurance team.