Plastic Injection Molds
Plastic injection molding is the process used to produce low or high volumes of custom plastic parts for commercial and industrial use. From intricate automobile safety components to simple products like business card holders, the applications span a range of industries.
In combination with skilled mold designers, software technology, and the use of expensive CNC machinery, Sinko mold builds molds for plastic injection that are used to produce high quality molded plastic parts. Our injection molding experts look forward to working with you on your mold build project as the next step toward manufacturing your custom molded parts.
Injection Molding Process
Plastic injection molding requires three primary components – an injection molding machine, a mold, and raw plastic material. Molds for plastic injection consist of high strength aluminum and steel components that have been machined to operate in two halves. The mold halves come together inside the molding machine to form your custom plastic part.
The machine injects molten plastic into the mold, where it solidifies to become the final product. The injection molding process is actually a complex process with many variables of speed, time, temperatures and pressures. The complete process cycle for making each custom part can range from no more than a few seconds to several minutes. Below we offer you a very brief explanation of four steps of the molding process.
- Clamping – Before the plastic is injected into the mold, the machine closes the two halves of the injection mold with tremendous forces which prevent the mold from opening during the plastic injection step of the process.
- Injection – Raw plastic, generally in the form of small pellets, is fed into the injection molding machine at the feed zone area of a reciprocating screw. The plastic material heats up by temperature and compression as the screw conveys the plastic pellets through heated zones of the machine barrel.The amount of melted plastic that is conveyed to the front of the screw is a strictly controlled dosage because that will be the amount of plastic which will become the final part after injection. Once the proper dosage of melted plastic reaches the front of the screw and the mold is fully clamped, the machine injects it into the mold, pushing it into the endpoints of the mold cavity under high pressures.
- Cooling – As soon as the molten plastic contacts the internal mold surfaces, it begins to cool. The cooling process solidifies the shape and rigidity of the newly molded plastic part. The cooling time requirements for every plastic molded part depends on the thermodynamic properties of the plastic, the wall thickness of the part, and the dimensional requirements for the finished part.
- Ejection – After the part is cooled inside the mold and the screw has prepared a new shot of plastic for the next part, the machine will unclamp and open the plastic injection mold. The machine is equipped with mechanical provisions that work with mechanical features designed within the plastic injection mold to eject the part.The custom molded part is pushed out of the mold during this stage and once the new part is fully ejected, the mold is ready for use on the next part.
Many plastic molded parts are fully completed after the are ejected from the mold and simply fall into their final carton to be shipped in, and other plastic part designs require post operations after they are injection molded. Every custom injection molding project is different!
The Mold and Machinery Technologies Used by Good Plastic Injection Molding Companies
Any reputable plastic molding company will have expertise in a variety of technologies for designing and manufacturing molds and custom plastic parts, including but not limited to:
- CAD software – Computer-aided design software allows the manufacturer to take a simple 2D drawing and create an optimized 3D design for your parts and injection molds. Our knowledgeable and friendly technicians put their expertise to work on designing custom parts and molds for your manufacturing needs.
- In-house CNC machining – Computer numerical control is a technology that uses a software program to direct the manufacturing equipment in machining the part shape and features into the plastic injection mold. This process is how aluminum or tool steel is machined to form the custom injection mold for production. Our mold manufacturing processes are fast and produce high-quality injection molds in-house.
- All-Electric servo injection machines – At Sinko Mold, all of our injection molding machinery is modern all-electric servo driven. That means our machines use 50-70% less energy than traditional hydraulic pump motor driven molding machinery of the past. We are proud to say that in addition to being environmentally and workplace cleaner, our machinery is the most precise and repeatable that is available in our industry.
Types of Plastic Materials Used
We use many thermoplastic materials for your custom plastic part needs. Many of the plastics listed here are always in stock and ready for production. If your product needs a custom color we can help!
- ABS (Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene)
- ASA (Acrylonitrile Styrene Acrylate)
- HDPE (High Density Polyethylene)
- LDPE (Low Density Polyethylene)
- PA 6 (Nylon Type 6, Aliphatic Polyamide)
- PA 66 (Nylon Type 66, Aliphatic Polyamide)
- PC (Polycarbonate)
- PC/ABS (Polycarbonate + Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene)
- PMMA (Acrylic)
- POM (Acetal, Polyoxymethylene)
- PP (Polypropylene)
- TPE (Thermoplastic Elastomer)
- TPO (Thermoplastic Polyolefin)
- TPU (Thermoplastic Polyurethane)
- PEI (Polyetherimide)