• This tool is essentially a metal mold which has a cavity in the shape of the part or component that needs to be produced. The tool is built from hardens and plated steel aluminum blend and is worn up and over to outcome many consistent versions of the equal section.
  • A mold effect tool has multiple craters and can crop several components from the equal specific injection.
  • The plastic / polymer are injected under pressure into the mold tool.
  • The tool is held closed under pressure until the plastic material cools and sets hard in the mold tool cavity.
  • The screw starts to move back for the next molding, the tool then opens and finished plastic part is ejected. The tool is closed and the injection molding process starts again.

What about the environmental impact of plastic?

We often hear about the many negative aspects of e.g.

  • Pollution from plastic that has not been recycled/has ended up as litter on land and in the sea.
  • Worries about the non-biodegradable nature of many plastic.
  • The fact is that the resilience, durability, strength and flexibility of plastic are some of the main reasons why they are so useful to us. Progress is being made in creating biodegradable plastic products e.g. food bags for recycling and carrier bags.
  • Laws, regulation and targets to reduce landfill and promote recycling domestically and commercially are now having a major positive effect on how we deal with plastic waste products. Approximately one quarter of the plastic we use is now being recovered and recycled and this number is steadily increasing over time.

There are also many positive environmental aspects to plastics and plastic molding manufacturing including:

  • Advances in engineering technology mean that injection molding machinery now uses 20%-50% less energy compared to 10 years ago.
  • The lightweight nature of plastic relative to alternative materials means that it keeps down the weight of the products that it’s used in. In the case of aircraft and road vehicles this can translate into fuel and energy savings.
  • The effectiveness of plastic insulation materials in buildings such as Expanded Polystyrene (EPS) helps save energy and money.
  • Plastics are used extensively in double glazing and renewable energy products and therefore help to save and produce energy.
  • Plastic injection molding is a vital process in manufacturing with benefits for the UK economy and the environment as well as our daily lives.

Vacuum forming

  • Vacuum found or thermoforming associated a bitter surface of plastic vitality stretched onto or into a specific shallow mold. The heated plastic sheet is held against the mold by applying a vacuum between the mold surface and the sheet.

The vacuum forming process

  • Once the correct vacuum forming tool is loaded into a vacuum forming machine, plastic forming can be produced using the following process:
  • The vacuum forming tool is warmed.
  • Plastic either in roll or sheet form is fed into the material carrier of the vacuum forming machine.
  • The heaters raised the plastic piece, heat the plastic element until it converts soft.
  • The softened sheet of heated plastic is leveled automatically using air.