Top TEN Tips to Becoming More Efficient in Thermoforming
As today’s heavy gauge thermoforming market is
growing and becoming more competitive, companies
are looking for better ways to gain efficiencies.
A large portion of a company’s success comes from the
efficiencies they have or the efficiencies they create.
Through years of working with thermoformers, we often
work with companies that we can help gain major efficiencies.
Although engineering firms, suppliers and consultants
are not necessarily needed to implement improvements,
they all have the continual opportunity to work with thousands
of thermoformers and thousands of different applications.
From a general viewpoint, here are 10 tips to be
more efficient, or areas where improvements can be implemented.
With the proper knowledge, companies should
assess their strengths and weaknesses and begin preparing
for future plans to address their major inefficiencies.
Outdated Equipment
As thermoforming is not a new process, thermoforming
equipment has been around for over 50 years. This does
not mean you should keep your machines for 50 years!
Begin putting together long-term plans to replace or
upgrade them. Old, inefficient machines are the single
largest item that restricts manufacturers’ ability to run at
their most efficient. Older machines also tend to have limited
capabilities and offer no real competitive advantage.
The term, “it paid for it self already” does not make you
efficient.
A large portion
of a company’s
success
comes from
the equipment
they utilize. If
you never
investigate the
latest technology
or do not
have plans to
invest in the
latest technology,
this may
be the single largest mistake you can make. With all of the
technological advancements available in today’s new
machinery, older machines cannot be compared and certainly
cannot compete in terms of performance, cycle time,
material distribution, energy use, repeatability, changeover
time, flexibility and even maintenance.
Tooling/Molds
One of the most limiting factors leading to running efficient
stems from poor mold designs and, even worse, the
type of material chosen to construct the mold. Regardless
of your machinery being new or old, a bad mold will dictate
your ability to be efficient.
Although the volume of products produced or the design
of the finished product may dictate what can be used, too
many formers start with looking for the least expensive
way to get a mold and start producing products the fastest.
A badly designed mold or molds that are not water cooled
aluminum will allow competitors to redesign and improve
cycle times lowering overall manufacturing costs. Patching
up poorly designed molds may help, but will only allow you
to run your product at what the mold design allows for. Too
often formers are running high volume jobs, in some cases
several shifts, with multiple non-water cooled molds; when
one good aluminum water cooled mold can be utilized to
produce parts up to three times faster. Production cycle
times should never be based upon how long it takes your
mold to cool off between shots unless the volume is very
low or you are prototyping.
Cycle Times
As there are many ways to improve cycle times, we far
too often see products running too slow. Thermoformers
need to take the time to improve, determine the bottle
neck and implement a way to correct it. If the problem is
heating times, make plans to improve your ovens or spend
more time setting them up and tweaking them. If the issue
is forming and cooling times, look to replace tooling with
better molds or investigate alternative cooling options. If
secondary operations are much more time consuming,
look for more options and capabilities to speed up the
process or be open to jobbing the work out to someone
who may be more efficient in that portion of the process.
Sheet Size
Use smaller sheets: far too many thermoformers are
using too much material. Look for ways to reduce your
material costs and implement a new standard. Look at
your clamp frames; are you clamping more than 1/2”? Do
not try to get 50 years out of a piece of clamp frame, you
will easily spend the money in material costs in the long
run due to sheets pulling out, oversizing the sheet and
increased scrap rates. Replace damaged or bent frames:
utilize frames that require less than 1 inch in the clamp.
Work on utilizing thinner gauge sheets too. This can be
achieved with more oven control, better oven designs and
the use of different forming techniques. Material gauges
can be greatly reduced and still meet
your finished parts’ minimum thickness
requirements.
Ovens and Oven Controls
Older ovens need attention.
Maintain them to get the most out of
your machines. Costly retrofits are one
option, but typically only help in one
area of your machine. For 30% to
40% of a new machine cost, oven
retrofits are typically seen as a short
term solution to gain efficiencies.
Get more oven control, or at least
some control. Machines with no “Zones”
should not be used unless you have no
competition and are a non-profit organization.
The additional utility costs for
operating the entire oven when smaller
sheets are used is not efficient and costs
too much with today’s utility prices. You
need oven zones to shut off areas that
are not heating the sheet, zones also
allow you to gain more control over the
process to decrease heating times and
even decrease starting sheet gauges.
Having zones in your oven also eliminates
the need to physically screen an
oven or block heat transferring into the
sheet. Physical screening is both time
consuming and an inefficient use of
energy.
Over Heating the Sheet
Stop overheating the sheet. Many thermoformers are
overheating the sheet as they do not know what temperature
the sheet is. The days of visually detecting sag or
touching the sheet to measure temperature are gone.
Photo eyes and infrared pyrometers are used for detecting
sheet sag or sheet temperature. Some of these devices
can be purchased for less than $100. If you overheat the
sheet, forming and cooling times are extended, making
cycle times much longer than necessary. Not to mention
the additional wear and tear on your machine, your mold,
the extra costs you pay for labor and the added utility cost
used to overheat the material.
PLC’s and Quick Set Ups
Updating machines from manual timers to PLC controls
is a step forward but PLC’s programmed by non-industry
professionals will most likely limit the machines capabilities
and only allow a slight increase in efficiencies. Again,
this should be looked at as a short term fix.
Thermoforming machine manufacturers who build these
controllers can at least guarantee flexibility, full functioning
and support.
Companies must fully investigate the control systems
and all features that will benefit their operation. The latest
controllers allow you to memorize all functions of the
machine for each job you run. This means all the time it
takes to manually program a machine is reduced to the
touch of a button the second time the machine is set up.
The possibility of damaging the machine or producing
scrap is greatly reduced, and the ease of continually
tweaking specific applications is simplified.
Cooling
The thermoforming process may begin with heating the
sheet, but acquiring the fastest cycle times is not solely
based on how fast you can heat the sheet. In order to
establish faster cycles with materials that have longer
cooling characteristics (than heating characteristics), you
must accommodate the cooling process.
Whether you need additional cooling fans, a directional
blower, spray mist or even air conditioned cooling, there
are numerous ways to incorporate these. Precise location
and positioning of these cooling systems will also lead to
faster cooling times. Automated in-machine post cooling
may be needed for heavy gauge products in order to run
the machine based on heating times rather than cooling
times. Depending on part specifications and tolerances,
post cooling can be the key to gaining more parts per hour.
Trimming
Too often thermoforming machine cycle times are
extended to match the trimming process time. Again,
companies who investigate in the newest methods of trimming
and trimming speeds may find ways to speed up the
parts trimmed per hour. With newer equipment with faster
speeds, some applications can see a 300% increase in
parts per hour. A little more time spent on tightening up
the programming can now result in parts per hour increases
as high as 500%.
Vacuum
Insufficient volume, recovery time and insufficient pressure
are often the cause for deficient processing causing
part variation and increasing scrap rates. Determine the
amount of work to be done in cubic feet or cubic inches.
Items needed to calculate amount of work are: process
(possible predraw box), sag, tool and tool cavity. Large
tool cavities are back-filled with polyethylene balls to
reduce the amount of cubic feet needed. Determining the
flow in cubic feet per minute will result in the amount of
time at a specific pressure (hg) to evacuate
the needed cubic feet of work.
Items needed to calculate are: tool port
size, distance from tool port to vacuum
valve, vacuum valve flow in cfm, starting
pressure and tank volume. By
adding pump starting pressure and cfm
capacity, the recovery time may be calculated.
Although this is all easier said than
done, companies who are in it for the
long run will continually look for ways
to improve and gain efficiencies.
Whether you develop short or long
term plans, or implement temporary
fixes to help gain efficiencies, you must
start preparing to stay ahead of the
market.
Written by Michael P. Alongi, Sales
Director for MAAC Machinery Corp.,
manufacturers of a wide range of cutsheet
thermoforming machinery.
For more information, contact
MAAC Machinery Corp., 590 Tower
Blvd., Carol Stream, IL 60188, 630-
665-1700, Fax: 630-665-7799, E-mail:
sales@maacmachinery.com, Web: www.maacmachinery.com
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