Thermoforming
Information & Resources: In-Line or Roll-Fed Thermoforming The majority of roll-fed machines or in-line machines are commonly used for the production of thin-walled products such as cups, trays, lids, internal packaging, and other finished products with a finished wall thickness of .003" to .060". Because of the speed of these machines, secondary operations are incorporated within the unit. These may consist of printing, filling, sealing, die cutting, scrap cutting, or automated removal and stacking of finished product. The normal roll-fed machines consist of the roll station, upper and lower heating banks, form station, cooling station, and trim station.
Shuttle and Sheet-Fed Thermoforming The clamped sheet is transported horizontally to the oven area, where an upper oven is often supplemented with a lower oven so that both sides can be heated simultaneously to speed up the cycle, especially in the case of thick sheet. The clamp frame then returns to a position over the mold and descends, or the mold moves into the sheet to effect the forming step. Shuttle sheet-fed machines tend to be for all-purpose use. Molds are easily accessible for quick change over, and the full spectrum of material thicknesses can be formed. Particularly useful for thick sheet, these machines commonly work in sheet sizes from two feet by two feet to ten feet by twenty feet.
Rotary Thermoforming Production rates are increased because there are 2, 3 or 4 sheets in the forming process at the same time. A two or three station rotary will have approximately the same output as a shuttle thermoformer with two molds. Using multiple cavity tooling on a rotary machine can, in many cases, provide production rates equal to or greater than injection molding. Rotary thermoformers with two heating stations are designed so the sheet is uniformly preheated in the preheat station and subsequently heated to forming temperature in the second heat station. This divides the heating load between two separate sets of heaters. With this process design, two heat station thermoformers are usually cooling-time limited, instead of heating-limited. Therefore, the production rate is limited by how long it takes the part to cool after forming and before unloading.
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