Claims
- 1. A mold cavity filling injection nozzle for an injection molding machine comprising conduit means defining an axially extending central flow-through passageway having an outlet for allowing flow of liquified plastic molding material into a mold cavity of a molding machine, an outlet flap valve located inside said nozzle at said nozzle passageway outlet in a conical outlet constriction of said flow-through passageway having a flow-fill-direction convergent taper at the flow outlet end of said nozzle, said flap valve comprising a semi-resilient material having at least one very narrow slot therein communicating at an upstream end with said flow passageway and at a downstream end with the exterior of said nozzle, said slot having a length dimension axially of said nozzle greater than its width dimension transverse to the longitudinal axis of said nozzle, said slot having a thickness dimension in a direction perpendicular to the imaginary plane defined by said length and width dimensions on the order of about 0.000010 inches, said slot being thickness enlargeable by the fluid pressure exerted by liquified plastic injection molding material when present in the said nozzle flow passageway to thereby cause flow opening action in said flap valve in response to said fluid pressure rising to a given predetermined positive value, said flap valve being operably closed by reduction of said fluid pressure to a predetermined minimum positive value or to a negative value.
- 2. The nozzle as set forth in claim 1 wherein said slot in said flap valve is cut in an “X” pattern as viewed in a plane perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of said nozzle.
- 3. An injection molding method for use with an injection molding machine system of the hot or cold runnerless type operable for feeding liquified plastic molding material to a mold cavity via a manifold, and for maintaining the fluidity of the manifold-resident plastic molding during closure of the injection gate, thereby enabling use of the resident molding material in the following molding cycle, said fluidity maintaining method comprising the steps of:
(a) providing a flow path for the liquified plastic molding material extending between a manifold inlet sprue, as fed by the injection machine ram of the system, and a mold cavity fed by a cavity-fill nozzle at the outlet of a runner of the system, (b) providing said flow path as a flow conduit of solid material sized to have self supporting structural integrity for flow conducting the pressurized liquified plastic molding material, and (c) constructing said conduit of a non-metallic heat insulation material having a sufficiently low thermal conductivity to heat insulate the liquified plastic molding material resident in the conduit flow path such that this plastic molding material remains at a reasonable uncured molding temperature for the duration of at least one injection cycle of the system due to the heat insulation characteristics of the fluid flow conduit of the system.
- 4. The method of claim 3 wherein the heat insulation material of said conduit is selected to comprise a polymer material having mechanical properties adequate to permit continuous accessible usage as part of the manifold and/or nozzle system within the molding environment of the injection molding machine.
- 5. The method as set forth in claim 4 wherein the material of said flow conduit is selected to be a high temperature polymer material having low thermal conductivity, relatively high compressive strength and rigidity and relatively high wear resistance to the wearing action of molding material in liquid state flowing therethrough under injection molding pressures.
- 6. The method as set forth in claim 5 wherein said high temperature polymer material is selected from the group comprising one or more of the following polymers:
(a) a polytetrafluoroethylene compound (b) a polimide material (c) an acetal compound (d) an amorphous thermoplastic polyetherimide material (e) polyamide-imide material (f) polybenzamidazole material (g) a composite produced through the chemical vapor deposition or resin char process, and/or (h) as the matrix constituent in fiber-reinforced ablative nozzle components as disclosed in Miks et al U.S. Pat. No. 5,645,219 assigned on its face to Thiokol Corp. of Ogden, Utah and incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Parent Case Info
[0001] This application is a Divisional application of U.S. utility patent application Ser. No. 09/374,970, filed Aug. 16, 1999, and allowed on Nov. 21, 2002.
Provisional Applications (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
|
60097779 |
Aug 1998 |
US |
Divisions (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
09374970 |
Aug 1999 |
US |
Child |
10154158 |
May 2002 |
US |