BASIC OF PLASTIC PROFILE EXTRUSION from freemexy's blog
BASIC OF PLASTIC PROFILE EXTRUSION
When I joined Geist Plastics
three years ago this month, I didn’t know anything about plastics
extrusion. I had experience in several other fields, including
construction and banking, but I wouldn’t have recognized an extruder if I
tripped over it. So when it comes to learning the basics of profile
extrusion, if you or any of your colleagues don’t understand it, believe
me when I say it’s a manufacturing process you can easily grasp.Plastic Profile Production Line
In brief, plastics extrusion is the process of using a machine to take raw plastic material and melt it, push it through a metal block (a die) to form the desired product, cool it and, ultimately, cut it into specific lengths. The types of plastics products manufactured using extrusion range from pipes and electrical covers to window frames and fence. If you’d like detailed information on the plastics extrusion process, you can read about it here.
About half of our customers know they need
extruded products but aren’t familiar with the manufacturing process.
One question we’re frequently asked is whether we can use tooling made
by another company. The answer is yes; we have a steel adapter to make
their tooling work with our machine. Another question is whether we can
make prototypes. The answer is no; it’s cost-prohibitive because the
custom dies we make range from $3,000 to $80,000. A typical production
run of an extruded profile ranges from a few thousand feet in a single
shift to hundreds of thousands of feet produced over a couple of weeks.
If a client really needs a prototype, however, we can use a 3D printer
to create it.
We spend a lot of time educating customers about
product color options, tooling costs and materials. Most customers don’t
want too much detail. For instance, they just want to know if the
material they suggest will shatter easily or if it’s unbreakable; they
don’t want to know the components of the materials. But if you’re among
those who want in-depth information on how extrusion works, just say so.
Along with our in-house experts we have outstanding outside resources.
When customers come to us with “off the wall” projects – materials that
are difficult to work with or odd-shaped profiles – we turn to our
industry consultant for some pointers on getting started. He’s so
renowned he’s in the Plastics Hall of Fame. (I bet you didn’t even know
there was a Plastics Hall of Fame!)
The Wall