| Learn More |
Visit the Auxiliary Equipment Zone
|
| Company Info |
|
Centro Inc.
Liberty, Iowa
(319) 626-3200
Ferry Industries Inc.
Stow, Ohio
(330) 920-9200
493K Ltd.
Belfast, U.K.
+44 28 90 45 70 77
Mold In Graphic Systems
Clarkdale, Ariz.
(928) 634-8838
Powder King LLC
Anthem, Ariz.
(623) 551-9897
reSource Inc.
Tallmadge, Ohio
(330) 634-0640
Reduction Engineering
Kent, Ohio
(330) 677-1343
Rotoline
Kent, Ohio
(330) 677-1343
STP Equipment
Bromptonville, Que.
(819) 846-2787
Wheeler Boyce
Stow, Ohio
(330) 686-1292
|
Rotomolding nylon 6 parts directly from caprolactam monomer and pulsed-air
pressurization of molds to make tougher parts were new developments presented
at the 29th annual Fall meeting of the Association of Rotational Molders (ARM)
in Cleveland. A new source for automated material batching, an anti-microbial
mold spray, and several new machines—both maxi and mini—were also
introduced at the meeting.
 |
| ReSource Inc. now designs automated preheating and weigh batching systems
for rotomolders. In this configuration, a single resin is preheated and sent
to eight blenders for individual coloring. Then the mold is charged automatically
with a selected color. |
Making nylon in the mold
A process that polymerizes liquid caprolactam in the mold has been brought
to the U.S. by rotomolder Centro Inc., North Liberty, Iowa. Called Rotomolded
Anionic Polymerization, or RAP, the process is claimed to offer cost savings
relative to using standard nylon 6 resin. Centro developed the process with
several other European companies. RAP has been used in Europe for several
years to make fuel tanks, but Centro worked with several U.S. and European
companies (which it declined to name) to improve the safety and productivity
of the process. Centro is not currently offering to license it, but only
to use RAP to make parts itself.
In the RAP process, a robot dispenses liquid
caprolactam plus a catalyst and activator into a heated aluminum mold,
which is then rotated while the mixture reacts to produce a virgin nylon 6
part. The process is said to be faster than molding with nylon 6 and reportedly
makes superior parts free of surface porosity. In addition, RAP makes it
easy to customize formulations with pigments, impact modifiers, and uv
stabilizers, plasticizers, etc.
This mold has a pulse
A new pulsed pressurization and venting method is being developed to cut molding
cycle times while also reducing shrinkage and warpage and increasing part
quality by eliminating trapped air bubbles. This “DynamiKventing” method
comes from 493K Ltd. in Northern Ireland, a relatively new spinoff from Queen’s
University Belfast. The firm supplies mold-temperature and pressure measuring
equipment based on R&D conducted at the school’s Rotational Molding
Research Centre.
DynamiKventing delivers pulses of 1- to 3-psi air into the
mold in timed cycles. The pulses can be as long as 10 sec and spaced as
much as 10 sec apart. The system measures the air pressure and flow into and
out of the mold to detect problems such as a blockage in the vent pipe and
ensure that the mold is depressurized prior to being opened. Research has shown
that part impact strength can improve up to 10%. The company expects to
launch the process sometime in 2005.
Automate charge batching
Material-handling and dispensing systems for individual machines or plant-wide
use are now available from reSource Inc., which has supplied custom material
handling systems for plastics since 1994 but not previously for rotomolding.
The company’s line of material preheaters, mixers, and automated dispensing
equipment reportedly can help trim overall cycle times by up to 25% while
reducing scrap and allowing for just-in-time material delivery.
The firm offers
powder preheating, weighing, blending, and dispensing systems. For example,
reSource can supply systems with a central resin preheat station that delivers
material to as many as eight gravimetric blending hoppers where different
colors and/or additives are blended in. Systems use PC-based controls with
easy-to-use touchscreens, recipe storage and retrieval, and real-time reports.
The
firm also offers systems that use high-intensity blenders to heat the material
so no preheating is necessary. And instead of central blending, individual
dispensing systems can automatically blend and dispense mold charges on demand
at the press. Charges can be dispensed at up to 10 lb/sec for shot sizes
up to 30 lb with accuracy within 0.02 lb (10 g).
No more roto-moldy parts
Part discoloration due to the growth of bacteria, yeast, molds, and fungus
can be suppressed with Microface 1, a new antimicrobial aerosol coating for
polyolefin parts from Mold In Graphic (MIG) Systems. The permanent, silver-based
spray was developed by MIG and AgIon Technologies, Inc., Wakefield, Mass.
The colorless, odorless spray impregnates the part surface to combat microorganisms,
which are killed by silver ions. The spray combines silver with a polyolefin
and a ceramic that permits controlled release of the silver over time. This
biocide reportedly does not affect the part’s color or physical properties
and is tolerant of rotomolding process temperatures. The coating can be applied
in the mold or to the part after molding.
 |
| An IntelliCore folding table from Mity-Lite Inc., Orem, Utah, won ARM awards
for Product of the Year, Innovative State of the Art, and Best Conversion Part.
The 42-lb, 0.75-in.-thick table has a foam core and is 18% lighter than a thermoformed
table. It supports up to 1600 lb. |
Super-sized machines
Ferry Industries is developing a huge new shuttle machine with a 26-ft (312-in.)
swing diameter, capable of supporting 15,000-lb molds. Model RS7300 is designed
to mold large parts such as chemical or agricultural tanks. It can be ordered
with a straight or offset arm.
Ferry also plans to roll out a rock-and-roll
unit for large parts that delivers better wall-thickness uniformity, allowing
for possible part-weight reductions. The new RO-6100/3300 machine lifts
the oven from both ends and controls the tilting angle of the oven precisely
and repeatably. This allows for much more uniform wall thicknesses than
conventional rock-and-roll machines, which have a center pivot. The new model
can produce tanks up to 20 ft long and 11 ft in diam. It also holds up to 15,000
lb.
Meanwhile, Ferry’s Quintax line of routers has been expanded with
a new range of three-axis CNC units that have PC-based controls. The models
are said to deliver finer part finishing.
Machine builder STP Equipment has
re-engineered its High Volume Shuttle (HVS) machines for large parts. These “rocking
shuttle” units have a
rocking oven. What’s new is the operator stands at floor level
instead of up on a platform, which has been eliminated. In addition,
the touchscreen control interface has been revised with more user-friendly
graphic icons. The HVS series takes up half as much space as a conventional
rock-and-roll oven.
STP is also building its two largest machines ever.
These Hurricane in-line shuttle units will have a 220-in. swing radius
and will produce septic tanks and a marine product for molders in the
U.S. and France.
Mini molder
Prototype or lab-size rotomolding machines are becoming more widely available.
One example is Rotoline’s new Lab 0.5 model, its smallest yet. The
unit has a single offset arm and a cylindrical horizontal oven 18 in. long
x 18 in. diam. It is designed for short runs of parts that measure no more
than 18 in. in diameter. The whole machine (electrical panel, cart, and oven)
is mounted on a single base. Major and minor axes have infinitely adjustable
speeds from 0 to 24 rpm. Cooling is done with fans and water-spray nozzles.
The PLC controls permit manual or fully automatic operation. Price is around
$50,000.
 |
| A new lab-sized pulverizing system from Powder King allows for testing small
samples. |
Powder King, a two-year-old supplier of pulverizing equipment, rolled
out its first milling machine for lab-scale work. The new PK18 pulverizer
is a scaled-down model of the firm’s bigger units. It uses the company’s
disposable dual-disc and air-flow management technologies and can process
samples from 1 to 50 lb at up to 50 lb/hr. The equipment is designed for
cleaning in less than 10 min. Other features include a variable-speed drive,
vibratory feeder, and gap adjustment for the milling discs from outside
the mill with single-stud, push/pull adjusters.
Powder King also rolled
out the smallest production pulverizing system in the PK line. The PK120
can grind from 600 to 900 lb/hr of rigid PVC to 20-mesh fineness or 500
to 800 lb/hr of LLDPE to the standard 35 mesh.
More equipment news
Wheeler Boyce, a maker of cast and machined aluminum tools for rotomolding,
last June joined in a joint-ownership alliance with Rotoline and Reduction
Engineering, a manufacturer of material pulverizing systems. The three companies
will remain separate entities.
Wheeler Boyce also announced it is now distributing
mold clamps from De-Sta-Co. Industries,Madison Heights, Mich. One new model
is the MPLA-1000 pin-clamp system, an alternative to the standard 311 clamp.
In addition, De-Sta-Co simplified the design of its 311 bolt receivers
and offers a new dual-bolt-receiver design that more easily installs on the
mounting frame.
|