ggarnier
Mechanical
- Dec 9, 1999
- 26
Over the years I accepted on faith that trying to have parts of quite different size/geometry together in a family mold is a bad thing.
Recently I began to wonder "Why?". Which part suffers? (The big one/little one/both?) In what way do problems manifest themselves? The most obvious would be incomplete filling in one part - but if the gating and runner geometry were biased strongly in favor of the small part, it would seem that it would fill quickly and then the filling of the larger part would proceed as if the smaller one weren't there.
I'd appreciate any input - I think I have exhausted the patience of the tool maker I have been talking to with my repeated "Why?" (or "Why not?"
Recently I began to wonder "Why?". Which part suffers? (The big one/little one/both?) In what way do problems manifest themselves? The most obvious would be incomplete filling in one part - but if the gating and runner geometry were biased strongly in favor of the small part, it would seem that it would fill quickly and then the filling of the larger part would proceed as if the smaller one weren't there.
I'd appreciate any input - I think I have exhausted the patience of the tool maker I have been talking to with my repeated "Why?" (or "Why not?"