Troubleshooting Tips For Injection Blow Molding
Troubleshooting Tips For Injection Blow Molding
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INTRODUCTION
Injection blow molding incorporates particular characteristics and advantages over other
Processes. This process, which can produce a fully finished, close-tolerance container
Without scrap, is maximized when the correct polymer is selected and the production
Equipment is optimized. By utilizing the appropriate temperature profiles, pressures,
mold designs, associated tooling dimensions and trouble-shooting techniques, this process
can successfully yield the sought after results.
PRODUCING QUALITY BOTTLES
The utilization of quality control procedures can monitor the process and identify any
required adjustments. Here is a brief description of how these procedures can be
used.
Implement a quality assurance system that analyzes and reports bottle quality
during the manufacturing process. This system identifies any trends and allows for
process corrections prior to potential quality problems.
Develop and publish the quality standards for the desired bottle. Include dimensional
and visual requirements. Dimensional requirements may be in the neck area,
wall thickness, volume and/or bottle weight. Visual requirements may be the
color of the bottle, contamination, warpage, etc.
Specifications are required for each quality standard. Specifications
communicate the determined quality requirements clearly. When generating
the specifications, consider the container's end use and any government regulations
that may exist. Once the specifications are determined, tolerances can be defined. A
tolerance is an acceptable deviation from the desired quality specification.
LUBRICANT
Producing injection blow molded containers using low density, linear low density and high
density polyethylene resin requires, in many cases, a lubricating agent to aid in processing.
Lubrication is required, in most cases, to prevent the polymer from sticking to the metal surfaces.
An insufficient amount of lubricant causes the parison to stick to the core rods or the parison
mold. Sticking causes processing problems such as unblown bottles or stringing as the molds
open.
As rule of thumb for polyethylene, a concentration of 0.2% calcium stearate or zinc
stearate is necessary to provide lubrication. This level may be adjusted to achieve the desired
result, which may be higher, or lower according the size of the container and/or the design of the
core rods. It is important to blend the lubricant sufficiently to achieve the consistency required
to produce quality bottles continually.
TROUBLESHOOTING TECHNIQUE
Develop a simple, consistent plan when troubleshooting. For example, record molding
conditions on a routine basis for reference, make only one change at a time, allow sufficient time
following each change for the effect of the change to become apparent, record changes inlog book, etc. The key is to have
a checklist for review when troubleshooting. Attached is a
proposed checklist that may not be all-inclusive, but provides a good starting point.
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PROBLEM SOLVING
Polymer sticking to core rods
Melt temperature is too hot
Parison mold temperature is too hot
High or low packing or holding pressures
Hot core rods
Hot core rod tip
Low lubricant level in resin
Polymer sticking to parison mold
Melt temperature is too hot
Parison mold temperature is too hot
Packing or holding pressure is too low
Packing or holding time is too short
Low lubricant level in resin
Short Shots
Loss of heat in the parison mold
Loss of heat in the extruder or manifold
Loss of injection pressure
Loss of holding pressure
Loss of screw RPM
Foreign material is blocking the nozzle
orifice.
Nozzle is frozen off due to low
temperature in base
Manifold is too cold
Nozzle orifice is too small
Not enough preform time
Hopper is empty
Neck folds and shoulder cuts
Neck zone temperature is too cold
Melt temperature is too cold
Core-rod temperature is too cold
Injection pressure is too high
Holding pressure is too high
Holding time is too long
Cure time is too long
Parison Flashing
Melt temperature is too hot
Parison mold temperature is too hot
High injection pressure
High holding pressure
Low clamping pressure
Nozzle is damaged or not seated correctly
Mold construction is poor
Long, high-pressure, preform time
Mold coolant lines are plugged
Pigtails
Reverse RPM is too high
Decompress time is too long.
Incomplete Threads
Neck zone is too cold
Melt is too cold
Injection pressure is too low
Holding pressure is too low
Holding time is too short
Poor venting in parison mold
Insufficient blow pressure