ShiranS
Materials
- Jun 28, 2014
- 14
Hi everyone,
First thank you to all of you who posts questions and replies to them. I've learnt a great deal from Eng-tips.
My question today is on PP living hinges. Production guys at my company are having difficulty in molding a living hinge that can be flexed more than a couple times.
The material we are using is SRM 100NC by Reliance. In April we had this same problem and after investigating I found that we were running the mould with normal water not chilled. (The mold temperature would have been high) once we ran chilled water through the mold the hinge quality was sufficient. But now again the problem has come back.
In one hinge production tells me that the hinge only fails after a couple days. Another hinge the product fails after a couple hours of molding.
I don't have a lot of data to share. If you could tell me what parameters I should pay attention to when molding a living hinge with PP it would be very helpful.
The chief operating officer does not want to put a guy to flex every cap that is molded. It goes against his lean principles. How important is this?
Also I noticed that the product was under weight several items production had molded it. On average 2-3%. Does this have a huge effect?
My conclusion is that the melt temperature is too low and cooling is not sufficient to freeze the polymer chains.
One hinge std 7.8g - cycle time 14s - fails after several days. Molded-7.6g. Melt -210C
Second hinge std 4.2g - fails couple hours after. Molded 4.1g. Melt -190-200C
Thank you in advance.
First thank you to all of you who posts questions and replies to them. I've learnt a great deal from Eng-tips.
My question today is on PP living hinges. Production guys at my company are having difficulty in molding a living hinge that can be flexed more than a couple times.
The material we are using is SRM 100NC by Reliance. In April we had this same problem and after investigating I found that we were running the mould with normal water not chilled. (The mold temperature would have been high) once we ran chilled water through the mold the hinge quality was sufficient. But now again the problem has come back.
In one hinge production tells me that the hinge only fails after a couple days. Another hinge the product fails after a couple hours of molding.
I don't have a lot of data to share. If you could tell me what parameters I should pay attention to when molding a living hinge with PP it would be very helpful.
The chief operating officer does not want to put a guy to flex every cap that is molded. It goes against his lean principles. How important is this?
Also I noticed that the product was under weight several items production had molded it. On average 2-3%. Does this have a huge effect?
My conclusion is that the melt temperature is too low and cooling is not sufficient to freeze the polymer chains.
One hinge std 7.8g - cycle time 14s - fails after several days. Molded-7.6g. Melt -210C
Second hinge std 4.2g - fails couple hours after. Molded 4.1g. Melt -190-200C
Thank you in advance.