Sunday, 8 November 2015
FLASH OF manufactueing
Sunday, 8 November 2015 by Hoichoinews
Flash (manufacturing)
Flash, also known as flashing, is excess material attached to a molded, forged, or cast
product, which must usually be removed. This is typically caused by
leakage of the material between the two surfaces of a mold (beginning
along the parting line[1])
or between the base material and the mold (in the case of overmolding).
Molding flash is seen when the optimized parameter on cull height is
not calibrated.[citation needed] Proper design of mold parting surfaces can reduce or eliminate flash.[2]
Molding flash can be caused from old or worn mold cavities that no longer fit tightly together. Other times, the complexity of the part requires so many mating pieces with such precise geometries that it is almost impossible to create a perfect fit on every impression. Most often, the type of material being molded, and its attendant viscosity in its liquid form, is the primary factor that leads to the creation of the unwanted mold flash.[3]
The process of removing flash, known as deflashing, is commonly performed via cutting, breaking, grinding, or tumbling. Some foundries use robot autogrinders to remove this unwanted material. It is very typical for molders to have their operators trim flash with hand tools at the molding machine between cycles. Many molders and OEMs seek out the use of batch processes including vibratory tumbling, cryogenic deflashing[4] or media blasting to remove unwanted flash from large batches of parts.
Molding flash can be caused from old or worn mold cavities that no longer fit tightly together. Other times, the complexity of the part requires so many mating pieces with such precise geometries that it is almost impossible to create a perfect fit on every impression. Most often, the type of material being molded, and its attendant viscosity in its liquid form, is the primary factor that leads to the creation of the unwanted mold flash.[3]
The process of removing flash, known as deflashing, is commonly performed via cutting, breaking, grinding, or tumbling. Some foundries use robot autogrinders to remove this unwanted material. It is very typical for molders to have their operators trim flash with hand tools at the molding machine between cycles. Many molders and OEMs seek out the use of batch processes including vibratory tumbling, cryogenic deflashing[4] or media blasting to remove unwanted flash from large batches of parts.
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2 Responses to “FLASH OF manufactueing”
8 November 2015 at 09:39
good work bro....
9 November 2015 at 04:37
good brooo... we need more and more
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