Blow Molding Design Guidlines
Blow Molding Design Guidlines
Blow Molding Design Guidlines
A. Blow-Molding Process
1. The first step involves mixing, melting and pushing plastic (extrusion) to form it into
a tube called a parison that will be used to make the part.
2. A mold is used to make the part shape you desire. The mold has two halves that are
closed around the molten parison.
3. Air is blown into the inside of the parison to expand the molten plastic against the
mold surface.
4. The mold is cooled to set the plastic to the new shape of the mold.
5. The molded plastic part is removed from the mold, separated from excess parison
material called flash, and finished. (Most finishing steps can be completed in-mold
but some involve secondary operations.)
B. Materials
Material selection is a critical aspect of design and should involve serious study of:
1.
2.
3.
4.
Although there are thousands of plastic materials available, most wont meet the needs of
your product. Experience with blow molding grade materials is essential and we have
practical molding experience using every blow moldable material
Commodity Materials
Some of the least expensive materials are also the easiest to process. Polyethylene (PE) and
polypropylene (PP) are the most popular blow-molding resins. PE is currently less expensive
but PP tends to be stiffer which sometimes offsets the cost difference. These materials are
resistant to most chemicals. One difference is temperature performance with PE performing
better at -100 to +175 degrees F and PP performing well from -20 to +220 degrees F. These
materials usually form parts matching the principles discussed in this design guide.
Engineering Resins
Many engineering-grade resins can be blow molded. Some of the acronyms include PPO,
PC, PETG, ABS, TPE you get the idea. These resins require special consideration prior to
molding. Most require drying before processing, specially designed extruder screws and
specific processing conditions.The design criteria in this guide may not apply to parts molded
from some engineering resins. Please obtain the correct design information for your specific
project directly from our engineering personnel.
In order to design a blow-molded product, you must understand the interaction between the
molten plastic parison and the mold. If youve blown a bubble from bubble gum you can
understand blow molding. The plastic material stretches like the gum and if it gets too thin it
ruptures. Since the parison is extruded as a tube, it is easy to make a tube or bottle shaped
part, not much stretching occurs. The two mold halves open, the parison is inserted,the mold
halves close and the part is blown. The split between mold halves is known as the parting
line. There is often a knife like edge on the parting line around the part shape known as
pinch-off.
If the part shape to be molded is changed from a tube into a flat panel
type part, the parison tube must be flattened to make the panel. When this happens the
circumference of the parison becomes the surface that needs to cover the width of the
panel. So we try to have a large enough parison diameter that as it flattens, it can be captured
by the entire perimeter of the panel at the pinch-off. If the parison does not extend to all
areas of the pinch-off, it must stretch the rest of the way.
The soft plastic can stretch only a short distance before it begins thinning. Like the bubble
gum, the first thin spot is weakest and it gets thinner fastest until it pops. If the plastic
parison pops it is called a blow-out and results in no part formation at all.
As the complexity of the part progresses to double-wall shapes with side walls and inner
contours, the parison must not only be captured at all points along the parting line, but it must
also meet the material thickness needs for the variety of molding conditions specific to each
area of the part. Many of the design criteria used to make a tray with molded inner shapes
will be the same for designing a complex industrial part.
Cooling
To control dimensions, surface appearance and warpage, it is important to have as much
control over the cooling of the part as possible. Flow rate is a major factor in heat removal
and cycle time. By creating turbulent flow, heat extraction and cycle times can be improved.
To control warpage in many designs, it is essential that the mold cooling be targeted to
provide extra heat extraction in the heavier wall portions of the part. The overall flow pattern
also affects the part quality. Water warms as it flows through the mold.
such as texture. Tooling engineers can target water lines near each critical section of the mold
to provide the dimensional control and appearance you need.
Venting
When the mold closes the parison is captured at the pinch-off. A certain amount of air is
trapped between the outside of the parison and the mold cavity. When air is blown to expand
the parison, the trapped air becomes compressed by the expanding parison until an interior
exterior pressure equilibrium is reached. When this occurs, the parison will not completely
touch the mold wall. The results are visible surface abnormalities, loss of texture &
engraving detail, the appearance of creases and drag-lines, and longer cycles from poor mold
cooling.
Venting can be easily located at the edge of any insert in the cavity. Slotted vent inserts or
porous metals can be purchased and fit into nearly any location. Some venting methods will
produce visible markings on the finished part. Texture, inserts and other techniques can be
employed to mask the markings made at the vent location.
If the double-wall part design has a dividing wall between two compartments, this wall is
formed by stretching the plastic into a groove in the mold core. As the plastic begins
stretching into a groove, it begins to thin. If the groove is too deep, the plastic quickly
reaches the point where it thins until the internal air blows-out through the wall to the outside
of the part. No part will form.
Because of this, there is one simple yet absolute rule, which governs the design of the ribs or
divisions between compartments. The depth (D) of the groove between core sections must not
exceed the width (W) of the rib W>D.
This rule also applies to other structural shapes. For example, a 1 tall, round post in the
center of a tray would have to be 1 or more in diameter.
If the part design requires a mold parting line which steps to various levels for the part to
function properly, then the core must have a positive draft on these steps at the pinch-off to
match the pinch-off on the cavity element of tooling. Varying pinch-off levels can change the
W-D relationships of nearby pockets or ribs. All of the levels within a part must pass the
W>D requirement in each direction.
Cooling
Frequently, the metal mass of the core is greater than the cavity and will require a greater
cooling capacity. Targeting waterlines for optimal heat extraction can be critical to the
success of the part.
Venting
Any location where air can be trapped between the parison and the mold wall is a location for
a vent. Deep cores can trap large volumes of air and the blowing speed can require larger
venting capacity for the trapped air to escape. If there is doubt, it is better to include a vent
than to discover the problem at production.
F. Air Space
It is the combination of closing the mold on the parison and the expansion of air inside the
parison that forms the part. The designer must leave sufficient space between the inner and
outer part surfaces to permit adequate blowing of air into every square inch of the part. If the
air passage inside the part is reduced or obstructed, the part will not form.
Webbing
There is a molding phenomenon called webbing that can occur when the mold closes. As the
core and cavity mold pieces close onto the parison, the parison is rapidly transformed from a
tube or bag shape into a functional configuration. As the core is pushing the parison into the
cavity it is possible for the opposite sides of the parison to touch before the air is injected to
form the part. When this happens, the plastic welds together inside the parison and when the
parison is inflated, the weld resists separation. The result is either a part with a very thin,
weak section all around the welded web or, if the nearby material tears when the parison is
inflated, it blows out and no part forms.
Webbing is more pronounced in deep cavities with corresponding deep cores. However,
certain configurations can make the parison collapse or fold back on itself to cause webbing
when the mold closes. It is a good idea to ask for a simulation test on deep parts that might
produce webbing.
Compression Molding
Many functional designs are greatly enhanced by the inclusion of compression-molded tabs,
locks or mounting surfaces.
Compression molded tabs can be added at any point along the mold parting line on the same
plane as the pinch-off. To change the angle of a tab relative to the basic parting plane, you
must create a mold parting line at the desired angle. This can be done with angled parting line
steps or inserts along the perimeter of the part or moving inserts within the part.
When blow-molded parts are to be combined with other parts through the use of mounting
screws, bolts or rivets, an exceptionally strong mounting surface can be provided by
compressing the inner and outer walls together. The two walls can be compressed together at
nearly any angle or location as long as there is ample room surrounding the compression for
good airflow and as long as the mold halves can close without interference.
By compression molding inner and outer walls together, the part rigidity and straightness can
be improved significantly. It is also an excellent way to provide stacking strength when
dealing with heavy loads
G. Creating Structure
The double walls in blow molded parts provide engineers with a tremendous opportunity to
create structure within the plastic part. A properly designed double-wall part will be
substantially stronger than a ribbed single-wall part of equal weight and can easily
outperform metals in many applications. There are several ways to add strength to blow
molded part designs.
sets the strength of the weld. By adjusting the distance between mold halves to between 60%
and 80% of the combined thickness of inner and outer walls, the weld can resist both
compression and separation forces.
The location of welds within a part will determine the stiffness and ability to support loads.
Designers must remember to pay attention to blow ratios between welds.
H. Finishing
There are a limitless number of secondary operations that can be performed on a blowmolded part to meet the needs of the finished product. Drilling, sawing, milling, cnc routing,
die cutting, punching, riveting, screwing, sonic, spin or heat welding, and surface treating are
common operations. Nearly any secondary step can be performed economically if the right
equipment is available. A surprising number of operations can be done in-mold. CustomPak provides a huge variety of secondary operations equipment at no charge.