DragonForge
Industrial
- Nov 18, 2010
- 21
Hello Chaps
I posted here back in 2010 and got some really helpful advice. I am hoping somebody here can help with my latest problem.
We produce injection moulded sword blades for the martial arts industry. We are now using an Impact Modified nylon with fantastic results. It is much tougher/heavier than the Impact Modified PP that we were using and flexes like tempered steel. It also does not need to be conditioned before using it. All in all it is the right plastic for the job.
However, as soon as the blades come out of the mould they start to warp. The go straight into jigs where they are left to cool. However, when removed from the jigs some are straight and others are not. Maybe 40% are straight enough. The rest have warped in one direction or another.
All the jigs are the same and are all kept in the same room (and therefore temperature).
We have tried 5 different syles of jigs now including spring loaded jigs that keep the blades compressed as they shrink and have tried cooling them in water whilst in the jigs. Still VERY inconsistent results.
The moulders and material supplier have basically said that this is the problem you get with moulding long lengths of nylon and have left it at that. Not really what I want to hear. If all of the blades were warped then I would take this as the case but given that 40% of them are straight, 40% less than straight and 20% very warped there has to be "something" affecting them other than "nylon does this".
Does anybody have any suggestions about why we have such inconsistent results?
Thanks in advance
I posted here back in 2010 and got some really helpful advice. I am hoping somebody here can help with my latest problem.
We produce injection moulded sword blades for the martial arts industry. We are now using an Impact Modified nylon with fantastic results. It is much tougher/heavier than the Impact Modified PP that we were using and flexes like tempered steel. It also does not need to be conditioned before using it. All in all it is the right plastic for the job.
However, as soon as the blades come out of the mould they start to warp. The go straight into jigs where they are left to cool. However, when removed from the jigs some are straight and others are not. Maybe 40% are straight enough. The rest have warped in one direction or another.
All the jigs are the same and are all kept in the same room (and therefore temperature).
We have tried 5 different syles of jigs now including spring loaded jigs that keep the blades compressed as they shrink and have tried cooling them in water whilst in the jigs. Still VERY inconsistent results.
The moulders and material supplier have basically said that this is the problem you get with moulding long lengths of nylon and have left it at that. Not really what I want to hear. If all of the blades were warped then I would take this as the case but given that 40% of them are straight, 40% less than straight and 20% very warped there has to be "something" affecting them other than "nylon does this".
Does anybody have any suggestions about why we have such inconsistent results?
Thanks in advance