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21 Hot runners.


Hot runners revolutionized the molding process by making part cooling the chief element dictating cycle time and not the sprue sprue, chronic disorder of the small intestine caused by impaired absorption of fat and other nutrients. Two forms of the disease exist. Tropical sprue occurs in central and northern South America, Asia, Africa, and other specific locations. . Because they dramatically reduce scrap, hot runners have benefited molders during times of rising resin prices. The technology has also opened the door to coinjection and multi-component molding within the same machine.

Until the 1950s, molders accepted the necessity of generating a large percentage of scrap on every shot, in the form of sprues and runners that had to be discarded (in-plant recycling was yet to come into fashion). Worse yet, the sprue was usually thicker than the part, so it lengthened length·en  
tr. & intr.v. length·ened, length·en·ing, length·ens
To make or become longer.



lengthen·er n.
 cycle time unproductively. In addition, secondary operations were required to separate the sprue from the part, often leaving an unattractive gate mark. The cold runner affected mold filling and packing due to the loss of heat from the melt while passing through the runner system. This caused pressure drops that could result in sink marks or under-filled parts.

Efforts to remedy this limitation date back at least to 1940, when E.R. Knowles patented a runnerless molding device. Relatively little activity in this area is recorded until 1952, when Protective Closures Co. of Buffalo, N.Y., offered a hot-runner system for molding small caps See Small capital . It used an electric heater plate bolted to the runner plate on the fixed platen A long, thin cylinder in a typewriter or printer that guides the paper through it and serves as a backstop for the printing mechanism to bang into. It is typically made of a hard rubber or rubber-like material. See carriage and typewriter. . Throughout the 1950s, hot-runners saw limited use. Because they were built as an integral part of the mold, they were inaccessible when starting up or when a gate plugged, and they were hard to insulate from the cold mold. Thermocouple placement was also difficult. (This history is summarized in The Development of Plastics Processing Plastics processing

Those methods used to convert plastics materials in the form of pellets, granules, powders, sheets, fluids, or preforms into formed shapes or parts.
 Machinery and Methods by Joseph Fred Chabot, Jr.; John Wiley John Wiley may refer to:
  • John Wiley & Sons, publishing company
  • John C. Wiley, American ambassador
  • John D. Wiley, Chancellor of the University of Wisconsin-Madison
  • John M. Wiley (1846–1912), U.S.
 & Sons, 1992.)

A solution, in the form of an "external hot runner," was introduced by Improved Machinery (Impco), Nashua, N.H., as early as 1954. It eliminated sprues and runners by gating directly into the cavity or cavities via multiple injection nozzles.

Watlow patented a cartridge-style heater in 1954, designed to keep material molten longer in hot runners. In 1958, Gerald D. Gilmore, one of the founders of Incoe, a builder of injection molds at the time, created an internally heated sprue bushing designed to keep the melt hot until it entered the mold cavity. Moldmaker Caco-Pacific says it also developed a hot-runner mold in 1959 that boosted productivity by 107% over cold-runner designs.

Mold-Masters Ltd. in Georgetown, Ont., patented what it claims to be the first truly commercial hot-runner system in 1963. Company founder Jobst Gellert created aluminum and beryllium beryllium (bərĭl`ēəm) [from beryl ], metallic chemical element; symbol Be; at. no. 4; at. wt. 9.01218; m.p. about 1,278°C;; b.p. 2,970°C; (estimated); sp. gr. 1.85 at 20°C;; valence +2.  nozzle components with cast-in heating elements that were fused to the body of the nozzle for improved heat transfer. He designed fused copper-alloy nozzles as well.

Hot runners didn't really catch on until the late 1970s. Only 15% of new molds reportedly were built with hot runners in 1978. That number is believed to be 50% to 60% today, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Incoe sources. One of the limitations was the large size of the probes or "torpedoes The list of torpedoes includes all torpedoes operated in the past or present, listed alphabetically.

See also:
  • List of torpedoes by country
By name

18" Mark VII

  • Country of origin: India
  • Year: 1965
  • Operators:
," which ruled out hot-runners for very small parts. Since the 1990s, the trend has been to more and more compact nozzles, and nozzles that can edge-gate multiple parts. Gate pitch distances are now down to 7 mm.
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:TOP 50 INNOVATIONS 1955-2005
Publication:Plastics Technology
Date:Oct 1, 2005
Words:539
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