Posts Tagged ‘injection molding’

  • Thu, Dec 9 2010

    Over the past few months…

    Since late September, our sourcing teams in both China and the U.S. have been gathering information on potential factories for UnHampered.

    The sheer size of this product limits the potential factories… but it’s also what makes the sourcing process exciting! While plastics factories are quite common, plastics factories that have injection molding machines that can product laundry-bin size parts are far less common.

    That said, we have locked in a few viable partners in China. One of our factories made a functional prototype for us. See images!

    As always, we are doing our best to keep unit costs down. UnHampered, as designed, is quite a lot of material. We have gone through some slight design modifications to reduce the material in some places without detracting from the original design intent.

    In the next several weeks…

    We have secured factories overseas that can handle the large scale injection molding needed to complete this product. Now, we just have to negotiate pricing and delivery timeline. We are also waiting on one final quote from a U.S. supplier. They do single shot injections on a 2000-ton machine — these things are awesomely huge! We will make a decision on which supplier to go with and push UnHampered into tooling very soon.

  • Tue, Mar 23 2010

    One of the strengths of the Quirky community is the broad range of backgrounds that our members bring to the table. That variety does mean that some community members are intimately familiar with what happens “from sketch to store,” and others might be getting a bit lost when the conversations get more technical. So for my next few bi-weekly blog posts, I’ll be trying to explain the basics behind some of the most popular manufacturing methods we use. For those in the know, please excuse some broad generalizations.

    Far and away the most common process we use is injection molding – it’s probably the most common manufacturing method for any plastic or rubber. Molten plastic is shot into a steel mold at high pressure, allowed to cool slightly, and then ejected from the mold. The steel mold is called the tool, and tooling costs tend to be pretty high for injection molding ($1K-$80K) because steel is expensive and labor intensive to cut. On the other hand, the part cost (basically the cost of the plastic used) is pretty low, because it’s pretty easy to automate. The most basic mold would have two sides and no moving parts (except opening and closing). For more complex geometries, or to add features like threads, mold makers add more parts to the mold (which, of course, adds more cost).

    While the plastic is cooling, it also shrinks, and that’s the basis of most of the limitations involved in injection molding. One example is wall thickness. Because the cooling occurs at different rates depending on how thick the part is, parts need to have more or less even thickness – otherwise the part warps, because the middle of thick sections are still liquid while the thinner sections are trying to shrink. If you want to know more about different design constraints for injection molding, just google it – there are tons of guides out there.

    Two of the most powerful things you can do with injection molding are overmolding and insert molding. For overmolding, you mold two different materials in the same mold – that’s how you get all of those objects that have rubber grips permanently attached attached to hard plastic. Overmolding is very popular in toothbrush and sneaker design. Insert molding is where you take something and put it in the mold before the process starts, so that it ends up embedded in the part. For example, Cordies has an insert molded steel piece that adds weight to the ends.

    There are lots of books out there on injection molding, and lots of slight variations on the process, but that’s the general gist of how it works.

    Addendum from Ben: How does this all work in the real world? Check out our awesome PowerCurl molds!