Thursday, September 15, 2011

The Manufacturing Technique in Plastic Injection Manufacturer

       The plastic injection manufacturer in this industry has evolved over the years from producing combs and buttons to producing a vast array of products for many industries including automotive, medical, aerospace, consumer products, toys, plumbing, packaging, and construction.

       In a plastic injection manufacturer, granular plastic is fed by gravity from a hopper into a heated barrel with injection molding. As the granules are slowly moved forward by a screw-type plunger, the plastic is forced into a heated chamber, where it is melted. As the plunger advances, the melted plastic is forced through a nozzle that rests against the mold, allowing it to enter the mold cavity through a gate and runner system. The mold remains cold so the plastic solidifies almost as soon as the mold is filled.

       The plastic injection molding is used to create many things, such as wire spools, packaging, bottle caps, automotive dashboards, pocket combs, some musical instruments (and parts of them), one-piece chairs and small tables, storage containers, mechanical parts (including gears), and most other plastic products available today. It is the most common method of part manufacturing, ideal for producing high volumes of the same object. Some advantages of injection molding are high production rates, repeatable high tolerances, the ability to use a wide range of materials, low labor cost, minimal scrap losses, and little need to finish parts after molding. On the contrary, the disadvantages of this process are expensive equipment investment, potentially high running costs, and the need to design moldable parts for molded plastic.

 

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