MoldMaking Technology

NOV 2015

Advertising in MoldMaking Technology offers

Issue link: https://mmt.epubxp.com/i/587376

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 9 of 59

8 MoldMaking Technology November 2015 Editorial Advisory Board (EAB) Insight Experimenting with 3D Printing By John Berg Moldmakers Inc./MGS Tooling has been using various addi- tive manufacturing (AM) technologies for several years to produce conformal and near-conformal cooling channels in molds. For projects with challenging part-design and perfor- mance features (for example, thin walls, flatness tolerances and part stability issues) or for projects where cycle-time opti- mization is critical, we use comprehensive process simulation to experiment with various cooling strategies. These cooling channels often cannot be created using traditional subtractive machining methods. Unique part geometries require a mix of outside sources to create the involved mold components. As our customer's applications grow, we continue evaluating the scope of avail- able AM technologies to determine where to make invest- ments in in-house capabilities. One area for consideration is prototyping. The use of 3D printing for individual or small-lot prototype production was a given. However, projects requiring a larger number of proto- parts—several dozen, for example—could easily tie up a 3D printer for weeks. Through our research, our company became aware of the option of using AM to create temporary inserts/ mold components, but documented results and case study reports on this option were hard to come by. We decided to plan our own experiments using AM, setting out to 3D-print core and cavity stacks used in a mold base. We took an existing ring-like part design and modified it to approximate some of the challenging geometry features we often encounter. Our goal was to learn as much as we could about: • The limitations of 3D-printed injection mold components of general part design (for example, draft angles, depth of features, gating and wall thickness). • The limitations of mold materials that could be used for the fabrication of the components (for example, which resin is suited/not suited for which technique). • The true cost of manufacturing a mold in this fashion and the lead time for producing parts (not just the cost of the printed core and cavity components). • The number of usable parts we could mold using any given system. We needed to know what could be done, which also meant we had to learn what could not be done. We chose to evalu- ate two styles of 3D fabrication: stereolithography (SLA) and layer additive technology. We also chose three common resins to mold: polypropylene (PP), acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS) and nylon 66. We quickly learned that these 3D inserts are relatively fragile and must be handled with care. Also, these materials do not pull heat out of the part the way steel does, so cycle times are much, much longer, and shrinkage results will not be transferrable to the final production model. Evaluating the use of 3D technology is certainly not a one- day study. Several events need to be planned, all requiring a dedicated press, a process technician/operator and a project manager. Over the next few months, we will continue to try different materials and different construction technolo- gies. I will be working closely with our engineers to assist in documenting these activities and plan on sharing many of our learnings with you in a detailed article next year. John Berg Group Marketing Director (and rock 'n' roller) MGS Manufacturing Group Moldmakers Inc./MGS Tooling Germantown, Wisconsin john.berg@mgstech.com mgstech.com Core Company Competencies • A solutions provider for tight-tolerance, high-productivity, multiple-action, multi-shot molds with investment in highly accurate and repeatable machining technology. • Serves the medical/healthcare, consumer, packaging/closures, electronics/ computer, automotive and industrial markets. • Offers comprehensive process simulation, design for manufacture, complete development, sampling and project management services. • Focuses on multi-shot (robotic transfer, common core/rotary platen, indexing plate, rotary stack and spindle), comprehensive process simulation (fow/fll/cool/ pack/warp), conformal cooling techniques, mold material selection and auto- mated machining with integrated CMM validation. Darin Von-Asten (on left), MGS sampling process technician, and Kevin Klotz, MGS senior project engineer for simulation services, examine one of the prototype parts molded with 3D- manufactured core and cavity components.

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of MoldMaking Technology - NOV 2015