Jul 19, 2019Leave a message

Injection Molding Process

The plastic injection molding process is a manufacturing method for producing plastic parts. Before the process begins, an experienced mold maker must construct a mold or tool in order to produce a part. The construction of the mold will include two halves (core and cavity) and contain all the geometry and features that make up the part specifications. 


Once the mold is constructed, it is then loaded into an injection molding machine where the process is performed. A hopper holds thermoplastic pellets, which are fed into the barrel of the machine. Friction between the rotating screw and barrel melts the pellets. Hydraulic or electric toggles close the mold halves and press them together with hundreds of tons of pressure.  The rotating screw then advances a preset distance injecting a prescribed volume of the molten plastic into the mold cavity under high pressure (many thousands of PSI). Once the material enters the mold, it begins to cool and solidify to conform to the shape of the mold. After the material cools sufficiently, the mold is opened automatically and the part is ejected from the core by a number of ejector pins.  


Material enters the barrel 

Material melts and mixes 

Volume of material (Shot sizes in barrel is created) 

Mold closes

Injection of the plastic into the mold cavity

Molten material cooled (during this process, steps 1-3 are preparing for next cycle)

Mold opens

Part ejects

Return to Step 4 for the next cycle


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