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Troubleshooting Weld Lines and Meld Lines On Injection Molds
Troubleshooting Weld Lines and Meld Lines On Injection Molds
molds
In manufacturing, the Weld line or Knit line or Meld line is the line where two flow fronts meet when
here is the inability of two or more flow fronts to "knit" together, or "weld", during the molding
process. These lines occurs usually around holes or obstructions and cause locally weak areas in
the molded part.
A weld or meld line is a weakness or visible flaw created when two or more flow paths meet during
the filling process. Weld lines can be caused by material flowing around holes or inserts in the part,
multiple injection gates or variable wall thickness where hesitation or "race tracking" can occur. If the
different flow fronts have cooled before meeting, they don't interfuse well and can cause a weakness
in the molded part. A line, notch and/or color change can appear.
explanation from http://www.imtechdesign.com/ give brief reason why and when weld line, and melt
line will occurs.
a meeting angle, smaller than 135º produces a weld line; greater than 135º, a meld line. Note that
the weld line surface mark disappears when the meeting angle reaches 120º to 150º. Normally, weld
lines are considered to be of lower quality than meld lines, since relatively less molecular diffusion
occurs across a weld line after it is formed. However, there is always an exception to the rule and
some materials by nature tend to exhibit more visible weld lines irrespective of the angle. In addition
many fillers and additives also highlight weld & meld lines. Glass fibres and metallic pigments are
good examples.
Weld lines, melt lines or Knit lines could be caused by different causes:
These results show the importance of gate location and the need for the product
designer to coordinate his efforts with the tool builder. The gate should be located
both to avoid weld lines in high stress areas and to take full advantage of glass fiber reinforcement.
Techniques the designer might use to reduce stress level at a weld line include increasing the wall
thickness or adding ribs.
Solution
- This can be done by changing the polymer injection location or altering wall thicknesses to set up a
different fill time.
- increasing mold temperature, melt temperature, injection rate and pressure.
- Increased mold venting or addition of flow tabs also can help turn a bad weld into
a good weld
- Change the gate positions.
- Change the part thickness.
- Optimize runner system design. Reduce runner dimensions and maintain the same flow rate to use
shear heating to increase the melt temperature at the flow front
- Instead, it often helps to increase the injection velocity, decrease the fill time, and increase the
shear rate, which can lower the viscosity of the polymer during fill and thereby allow for better chain
entanglement and better packing. Increasing pack or hold pressure also helps, as well as having
longer pack and hold times. Increasing pack or hold pressure helps to eliminate low-pressure
conditions at the weld line. Another tactic to promote more chain entangling at the weld line is to
raise the mold temperature 10° C (20° F).