This invention relates to a process for producing a molded object with an embedded member, in which a member to-be-embedded is located within a thermoplastic resin.
A prior-art process for producing a molded object with an embedded member is such that a wound coil being a member to-be-embedded is located within a mold, and that the coil is supported by filling up the interspace between the inner surface of the mold and the coil, with a reinforcement mat. In addition, a reaction solution for performing reaction injection molding is supplied, and it is subjected to a polymerization reaction within the mold (refer to, for example, Patent Document 1).
Patent Document 1: JP-A-10-315267 (page 3, FIG. 2)
In the prior-art process for producing a molded object with an embedded member, the coil being the member to-be-embedded is supported by the reinforcement mat located inside the mold, and hence, there has been the problem that the placement of the reinforcement mat is troublesome.
This invention has been made in order to solve the problem as stated above, and it has for its object to provide a process for producing a molded object with an embedded member, in which a member to-be-embedded can be easily supported.
A process for producing a molded object with an embedded member according to this invention is performed by a first step of heating to a given temperature, a mold which is formed with a gate capable of packing a thermoplastic resin therethrough, and in which a plurality of pins extending from the outside to the inside of the mold are withdrawable outward; a second step of supporting a member to-be-embedded, including an upper part side thereof, with the pins, so as to hold the member to-be-embedded at a given position within the mold; a third step of packing the thermoplastic resin from the gate into the mold on a lower part side of the member to-be-embedded earlier, so as to press the member to-be-embedded against the pin on an upper part side of the mold, with the thermoplastic resin; a fourth step of packing the thermoplastic resin into the remaining part within the mold; and a fifth step of withdrawing the pins successively from a lower part side of the mold, before the thermoplastic resin cools down to a temperature at which it solidifies and loses its flowability.
This invention consists in that a member to-be-embedded is held at a given position within a mold, with pins, that a thermoplastic resin is packed from the lower part side of the member to-be-embedded into the mold earlier, so as to press the member to-be-embedded against the pin on the upper part side of the mold, and that the pins are withdrawn successively from the pin on the lower part side of the mold, before the thermoplastic resin cools down to a temperature at which it solidifies and loses its flowability, whereby the support of the member to-be-embedded can be easily performed.
Referring to
Next, a process for producing a molded object with an embedded member will be described. Referring to
A state which has been withdrawn from within the mold 1 after the lapse of a subsequent given cooling time period is a molded object with the embedded member 5 shown in
As described above, the thermoplastic resin 6 is packed into the mold 1 from the lower part side of the member to-be-embedded 2 so as to press the member to-be-embedded 2 against the pin 3 located at the upper part side of the mold 1, and the pins are withdrawn successively from the pin 3 located at the lower part side of the mold 1, before the thermoplastic resin 6 cools down to the temperature at which it solidifies and loses its flowability, whereby the support of the member to-be-embedded 2 can be easily done. In this case, the member to-be-embedded 2 is pressed upward by the thermoplastic resin 6 packed under the given pressure into the lower part side of the member to-be-embedded 2, so that even when the pins 3 are withdrawn before the solidification of the thermoplastic resin, the member to-be-embedded 2 can be prevented from moving in a gravitational direction.
Although the coiled member has been described as the member to-be-embedded 2 in Embodiment 1, a similar advantage can be expected for an electric device different from the coiled member, or any other device.
In Embodiment 1, it has been described that the thermoplastic resin is packed from the gate 1d into the mold 1 on the lower part side of the member to-be-embedded 2 earlier, so as to press the member to-be-embedded 2 against the pin 3 located on the upper part side of the mold 1, by the thermoplastic resin 6, and that the pins are withdrawn successively from the pin 3 located on the lower part side of the mold 1, before the thermoplastic resin 6 cools down to the temperature at which it solidifies and loses its flowability. Embodiment 2 may well be so configured that, as shown in a sectional view of essential portions in
Further, a similar advantage can be expected even when, as another example, the temperatures of the thermoplastic resin 6 in the vicinities of the individual pins 3 are sensed by locating temperature sensors 8, such as thermocouples, on the pins 3 as in a sectional view of essential portions shown in
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1 mold, 1d gate, 2 member to be embedded, pin, 4 protector, 5 molded object with embedded member, 6 thermoplastic resin, 7, 8 temperature sensors.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2005-125390 | Apr 2005 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/JP2005/016797 | 9/13/2005 | WO | 00 | 10/22/2007 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2006/114903 | 11/2/2006 | WO | A |
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6-37130 | Feb 1994 | JP |
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2002-225091 | Aug 2002 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20090115106 A1 | May 2009 | US |