Key Results
60+
CLEANING TIME
Reduction vs. traditional method
Significant
SCRAP RATE
From contamination-related defects
Eliminated
MOLD DISASSEMBLY
Cleaned in-press at temperature
The Situation
A Central Indiana automotive plastics manufacturer operates a fleet of injection molding presses running high-volume interior trim components for OEM customers. The molds — multi-cavity tools with fine texture, tight vents, and complex parting line geometry — accumulate polymer residue, off-gassing deposits, and release agent buildup over thousands of cycles.
As contamination builds, the facility sees a predictable pattern: vent clogging leads to short shots and fill imbalance, parting line residue produces flash that requires secondary trimming, and surface deposits cause cosmetic defects on textured parts. Each defect mode adds scrap, rework, and inspection burden.
The Challenge
The facility’s existing mold cleaning process was manual and time-intensive:
- Pull the mold from the press (crane time, setup labor)
- Cool the mold to a safe handling temperature (1–2 hours)
- Partially disassemble to access cavities, vents, and runners
- Hand-scrape, wire-brush, and solvent-soak to remove buildup
- Reassemble, reinstall, heat to operating temperature, and validate first shots
Total downtime per mold cleaning event: 6–8+ hours, depending on mold complexity. During this window, the press sits idle, production falls behind, and downstream assembly lines are affected.
The maintenance team also observed cumulative surface damage from wire brushing and scraping. Parting line surfaces showed wear marks, texture depth was decreasing in high-contact areas, and vent channels were widening — all contributing to shortened mold life and increasing tooling costs.
How We Work
1. Assessment and Custom Plan
2. In-Press Cleaning at Operating Temperature
3. Targeted Technique by Area
4. Containment and Documentation
Cleaning Time: Reduced by Over 60%
The complete mold cleaning — both halves, all cavities, vents, runners, and parting lines — was completed in approximately 1.5–2.5 hours depending on the mold. Compared to the previous 6–8+ hour manual process (including pull, cool-down, disassembly, cleaning, reassembly, reinstall, and reheat), total downtime was reduced by over 60%.
Zero Mold Disassembly
No Surface Damage
Reduced Scrap
Production Value Recovered
By reducing press downtime per cleaning event by 4+ hours, the facility recovered significant production capacity. For a high-volume press running automotive interior components, even modest downtime reduction translates to meaningful output and revenue recovery over a production year.