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The Life Of a Screw and Barrel



Estimated Life Expectancy

It is very difficult to estimate the life expectancy of a screw or barrel. Due to many variables effecting productivity, each barrel and screw is unique. However, the primary cause of premature deterioration is excess wear; and wear causes problems that result in the loss of production yield.

There are three types of wear that can occur during the molding process:

Abrasion - Caused by the fillers or make up of the resin

Corrosive - Caused by the additives in the resin

Adhesive - Caused by excessive friction between the barrel and screw

The most serious type of wear is adhesive.  Although the screw is intended to rotate freely in the barrel bore, under normal circumstances the screw makes casual contact with the bore. If the contact becomes too great, adhesive wear occurs.  There are a number of reasons that the contact between the screw and barrel could increase, including;

  • A bent screw or barrel
  • A bent screw drive
  • Worn bearings on the screw drive
  • Misalignment between the center of the barrel and the center of the screw driver coupler
  • An over-torqued screw that causes the screw to deflect during rotation

Another cause of adhesive wear is using matched-steel components. For example, using a screw and a barrel both manufactured from D-2 steel, and heat treated to the same value, will cause a high coefficient of friction, which in turn results in galling of the components.

Other factors that may cause adhesive wear include:

  • Rotating the screw without resin
  • Allowing the hopper to empty and the screw to rotate for an extended period of time
  • Malfunctioning heater bands, thermocouples, or temperature controllers which allow the plastic to overheat or cool beyond proper molding temperatures
  • Foreign objects in the resin. Take precautions, such as hopper magnets and material inspection devices to remove all unwanted particles from the resin.

 

Who Controls the Life Expectancy of a Screw and Barrel?

The person who purchases the new screw and barrel is the one who has control over the life expectancy. If the unit is purchased based on price alone, and the components are not of the correct grade of steel for the application, the life will be greatly reduced.  Or, if the screw design is not close for the application or the cycle run, the life span can be reduced.

The individual installing the barrel and screw also has some control of the life. During installation, steps must be taken to ensure the components are not chipped or scratched, or bolts are over tightened, etc. If used components are to be used with the new components, these should be inspected dimensionally for straightness.  Many screws that look good, but have been removed from worn barrels, are bent! Any time a new or rebuilt component is used in conjunction with a used or worn component, you should expect a shorter life span from your new component(s).

Many molding operations have a great number of people who have the authority to make changes to the molding cycle (time, temperature, pressures).  One mistake can be the downfall of the life of your components.

 

How Much Wear is Too Much on a Barrel, Screw, and/or Check Valve?

This question can not be answered by simply measuring your barrel and screw simply because some materials are more efficient than others when molding with worn components. You must measure your lost production yield. If you can not schedule around the wear, and you are losing production yield, it's time to add up the lost dollars.  It's simple math.  How much money are you losing in lost production yields versus the cost of a new unit?

If you schedule your molding machine properly, purchase quality components that match the requirements of your process, and stay within the other guidelines, your components should have a long and productive life.

 


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