1. Field of the Invention
The present invention related to injection molding, and more particularly, to an injection molding apparatus.
2. Related Art
Injection molding apparatuses, such as hot halves and hot runners, are frequently loaded to connect and seal various components. Loading may be due to a manufactured pre-load and/or forces generated by heat expansion when the hot runner is brought up to operating temperature. When loading is improper, components can be damaged or molding material can leak.
In an embodiment of the present invention, an injection molding apparatus includes a back plate and an actuator for moving a valve pin. A pressure disc is disposed between the back plate and the actuator.
In another embodiment of the present invention, an injection molding apparatus includes a back plate, a mold plate, a manifold disposed between the back plate and the mold plate, a nozzle, and an actuator connected to a valve pin. A first support transmits a first load between the manifold and the mold plate, and a second support disposed between the back plate and the actuator transmits a second load between the back plate and the manifold.
Embodiments of the present invention will now be described more fully with reference to the accompanying drawings where like reference numbers indicate similar structure.
The injection molding apparatus 100 includes a back plate 102, a mold plate 104 connected to the back plate 102, a manifold 106 disposed between the back plate 102 and the mold plate 104, an inlet component 108 connected to the manifold 106, nozzles 110 connected to the manifold 106, valve pins 112, valve pin bushings 113, actuators 114 disposed between the back plate 102 and the manifold 106, and pressure discs 116 disposed between the actuators 114 and the back plate 102. The injection molding apparatus 100 can be a hot half or a hot runner.
The back plate 102 and mold plate 104 are separated by an intermediate plate 118 and are connected by bolts 120. The bolts 120 are threaded into the mold plate 104 and not threaded into the intermediate plate 118. The bolts 120 can be tightened to establish a bolt load.
The manifold 106 defines a manifold channel 122 and has a manifold heater 125, such as the resistance wire heater depicted. In other embodiments, more manifolds can be provided.
The inlet component 108 defines an inlet channel 124 in communication with the manifold channel 122. Molding material (e.g., plastic melt) can be injected into the inlet channel 124 by an injection molding machine (not shown) or the like.
The nozzles 110 define nozzle channels 126 in communication with the manifold channel 122. Three nozzles are depicted, but more or fewer nozzles can be used. The nozzles 110 can all be of the same kind or can be of different kinds (as shown). Any of the nozzles generally include a nozzle body, a tip assembly, a heater, a thermocouple, or a terminal end. In this embodiment, the nozzles 110 each include a flange 128 (first support) that rests on a shoulder 130 of the mold plate 104. The flanges 128 transmit a first load between the manifold 106 and the mold plate 104. Each flange 128 transmits a portion of the first load.
The valve pins 112 extend through two of the nozzles 110 for controlling flow of molding material through the respective nozzle channels 126. The number of valve pins 112 used can correspond to the number of valve-gated nozzles used. In this embodiment, the middle nozzle does not have valve pin.
The valve pin bushings 113 are coupled to the manifold 106 and seal against leakage at the valve pins 112. In this embodiment, the valve pin bushings 113 are held to the manifold 106 independent of the actuators 114. In other embodiments, the valve pin bushings 113 can be held to the manifold 106 by the actuators 114.
The actuators 114 are disposed between the back plate 102 and the manifold 106. The actuators 114 can be pneumatic, hydraulic, electric, magnetic, or some other design. The actuators 114 can include cylinders, pistons, cap plates, valve pin adjustment mechanisms, seals, etc. Moveable parts of the actuators 114 are connected to the valve pins 112 so as to move the valve pins 112. Any number of actuators 114 can be used, provided that the valve pins 112 can be actuated as desired. The actuators 114 can all be the same or can be different.
The pressure discs 116 (second supports) are situated between the actuators 114 and the back plate 102. In this embodiment, each pressure disc 116 is in direct contact with the back plate 102 and a cap plate of the respective actuator 114. The pressure discs 116 transmit and focus a second load between the back plate 102 and the manifold 106 through the actuators 114 and optionally through the valve pin bushings 113. Each pressure disc 116 transmits a portion of the second load. Transmitting and focusing force to be inline with the components which require sealing can improve the sealing or lessen the total forces required.
A portion of or the entire bolt load, provided by bolts 120, is transmitted from the mold plate 104, to the flanges 128 of the nozzles 110, and from the nozzles 110 into the manifold 106. This is the first load. A portion of or the entire bolt load is transmitted from the back plate 102 to the pressure discs 116, through the actuators 114, and into the manifold 106. This is the second load. When there are no other loads applied to the injection molding apparatus 100, ideally the sum of the first load and the second load acting on the manifold 106 is zero. That is, the internal loads caused by tightening the bolts 120 are balanced. The total load in all the pressure discs 116 is the same as the total load in all the flanges 128. As a result, the nozzles 110 can be tightly sealed to the manifold 106 and/or can be tightly seated in their positions in the mold plate 104.
The distributions of the first and second loads may be symmetrical or may be asymmetrical. For example, geometry may dictate that one pressure disc 116 take more of the second load than another pressure disc 116. The distributions of the first and second loads are also affected by how uniformly the bolts 120 are tightened. For example, one bolt may be tightened more than the others to increase a share of the second load for a particular pressure disc 116. The same applies to all loaded components. For example, if a particular nozzle 110 leaks at its junction with the manifold 106, tightening a particular bolt 120 can increase the portion of the first load at the junction to reduce or eliminate the leakage.
A manifold 506 includes a manifold channel 522 and threaded bores 540. Nozzles 510 include nozzle channels 526 in communication with the manifold channel 522 and further include threaded ends 542 for threading into the threaded bores 540 of the manifold 506. A locating ring 550 (first support) is provided to locate and support the manifold 506 on the mold plate 504 via recesses 552, 554 in the manifold 506 and the mold plate 504. The locating ring 550 is structurally isolated from the nozzles 510, meaning that the locating ring 550 is a separate piece that does not form part of a nozzle 510. The locating ring 550 transmits the first load between the manifold 506 and the mold plate 504.
In this embodiment, the nozzles 510 do not load the manifold 506. In other embodiments or when the injection molding apparatus 500 is combined with a cavity/cold half, the nozzles 510 can provide some load to the manifold 506, such as sealing forces at the nozzle tips.
In other embodiments, more than one locating ring can be used, or one or more pressure discs can be used instead.
A manifold 606 includes a manifold channel 622 and threaded bores 640. Nozzles 610 include nozzle channels 626 in communication with the manifold channel 622 and further include threaded ends 642 for threading into the threaded bores 640 of the manifold 606. Pressure discs 650 (first supports) are provided to support the manifold 606 on the mold plate 104. The pressure discs 650 are structurally isolated from the nozzles 610, meaning that the pressure discs 650 are separate pieces that do not form part of a nozzle 610. The pressure discs 650 transmit the first load between the manifold 606 and the mold plate 104. This embodiment lacks pressure discs at the actuators 114, and instead, rigid actuator cap plates 660 contact the back plate 102 to transmit the second load.
In this embodiment, the nozzles 610 do not load the manifold 606. In other embodiments or when the injection molding apparatus 600 is combined with a cavity/cold half, the nozzles 610 can provide some load to the manifold 606, such as sealing forces at the nozzle tips.
In other embodiments, more or fewer pressure discs can be used, or one or more locating rings can be used instead.
In any of the embodiments above, the first support can be a simple block of material.
In additional embodiments, any combination of nozzle flanges, locating rings, pressure discs, bolts, and/or blocks can be used as the first support, and any combination of pressure discs and/or actuator cap plates can be used as the second support.
The first and second supports described herein may be selected or sized to impart sealing forces in the cold condition. For example, the pressure disc 116 of
Although many embodiments of the present invention have been described, those of skill in the art will appreciate that other variations and modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope thereof as defined by the appended claims. All patents and publications discussed herein are incorporated in their entirety by reference thereto.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 60/981,682 filed Oct. 22, 2007, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety herein.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/CA2008/001854 | 10/21/2008 | WO | 00 | 4/22/2010 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2009/052611 | 4/30/2009 | WO | A |
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20100233311 A1 | Sep 2010 | US |
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60981682 | Oct 2007 | US |