A toughened nylon 6 compound from Teknor Apex Asia Pacific Pte Ltd. has enabled custom molder Austmould Pty Ltd. to injection mold tips for industrial deadblow hammers that withstand rigorous impact testing even in their largest sizes and without need for a lengthy post-mold conditioning in water. Used in a many metal-working shops, deadblow hammers have tips that prevent damage to parts by absorbing the shock of the blow, while producing less noise than metal-tipped hammers and generating no sparks. Austmould produces 25-, 38-, 50-, and 60-mm diameter nylon 6 tips for a customer’s range of cast aluminum hammers. When the customer reported that some hammers with the largest tips were failing to pass its internal impact tests, Austmould consulted with Teknor Apex Asia Pacific and its distributor in Australia, TCL Hofmann.
Chong Seow Mui, Teknor Apex Asia Pacific sales manager, recommended substantially increasing the impact resistance of the hammer tips by switching to Chemlon® 280 nylon 6 compound, whose notched Izod impact strength at room temperature (23 ºC) is 1,200 J/m—more than six times greater than the nylon 6 material Austmould had been using. The Chemlon 280 compound passed molding trials at Austmould on both its small and large injection machines, and even the largest tips easily passed the customer’s impact test. “The larger the deadblow hammer, the more massive the impact forces it must endure,” said Timothy Stanton, production manager at Austmould. “The solution provided by Teknor Apex has assured that our hammer tips are unbreakable even in extremely vigorous testing, and we can now condition the hammer tips in air instead of requiring a lengthy conditioning step in water.” Conditioning, a post-molding process commonly used with nylon 6 products, involves exposing the parts to moisture, absorption of which can increase impact resistance. “When Austmould first consulted with us about the test failures, they were concerned about the possibility of incorrect molding parameters or improper post-mold conditioning,” said Nick Hayhurst, TCL Hofmann’s business manager for polymers. “The change to a compound with much greater impact strength did away with those concerns.”
Previous News
Next News
-
25 ton/hr filtration and pelletizing system commissioned by Nordson BKG™ adjacent to Lotte’s existing
-
Improvement seen in PET demand in Asia
-
Brazil's Odebrecht, Braskem to operate Petrochemical Project in West Virginia
-
European countries resume imports of petrochemical products from Iran
-
Chevron Phillips restarts two PE units at Cedar Bayou, Texas
-
Sumitomo buys 25% of CEPSA China chemical unit
-
MEGlobal’s MEG Asian contract price for May unchanged from April levels
-
Tensions escalate on Russia-Ukraine issue, emergency UN meet- Oil rises
-
PVC prices soften due to subdued demand in SE Asia
-
Global flexible packaging market worth US$99,621.9 mln by 2018
-
EPL and Indovida to Merge, Creating a Consumer Packaging Leader for Emerging Markets
-
ABS and Polystyrene facility in Iran hit
-
Converting Nylon Fish Net waste to 3D Printing Filament
-
Samvardhana Motherson International Limited India’s Global Automotive Plastics & Systems Powerhouse
-
Varroc Engineering Limited: From Polymer Components to a Global Automotive Systems Leader
-
Hitech Corporation Ltd - Prominent Manufacturer of Rigid Plastic Packaging Products, Serving Paints, Agrochemicals, Lubricants, FMCG, and Food Industries.
-
Mold-Tek Packaging Ltd – Leader in IML-Based Rigid Plastic Packaging Solutions
-
Bhansali Engineering Polymers Ltd. Expands Engineering Plastics Capacity in India
-
Styrenix Industries: Leading ABS & SAN Resin Producer in India
-
Chemplast Sanmar Ltd India’s Specialist PVC Resin & Paste PVC Manufacturer
{{comment.DateTimeStampDisplay}}
{{comment.Comments}}