2️⃣ Whether it’s a wedding with 500 “close friends” or sharing lunch tiffins in office, relationships drive decisions—more than individualism.
You can’t just pull a part straight out of a metal mold; it will stick.
A poor design can lead to warped parts, structural weaknesses, or cosmetic defects like sink marks. This guide breaks down the essential rules of injection molding part design into simple, actionable concepts. 1. The Golden Rule: Maintain Uniform Wall Thickness
Avoid solid blocks of plastic. If a boss meets a thick exterior wall, core out the back of the part to maintain uniform wall thickness. 7. Understanding the Parting Line and Gates
Grandma’s tips: using haldi for healing, storing spices in old-school dabba, natural cleaning with nimbu & salt.
The critical rib design rule is the . To prevent unsightly sink marks on the opposite side, the thickness of your rib at its base should be no more than 60% of the nominal wall thickness . For glossy or highly cosmetic materials, use an even thinner rib, roughly 40% of the wall thickness. And don't forget: your ribs need draft angles too!
If you follow the golden rules—uniform walls, draft always, ribs for strength, radii in corners—you will go from "why did this fail?" to "ship it."
The wall of a boss should be 60% of the nominal wall thickness.