Sure there is a relationship between cooling and the cushion. On semi crystal resins, we can increase melt temperature by decreasing screw rpm. As for amorphous polymers, melt temperature increases with higher rpm. Nylon is a semi crystal. With that said, will pretend a recovery time of nine seconds into a cooling of ten seconds. Nevertheless, we see an opportunity to run faster, and now we end with five seconds cooling. Well along with that change, the recovery time must be shorted lets say, down to four seconds. (Pretending that parts are dimensionally fine and there are no other changes to the process.) What we are doing by now, is not only running fast. Nevertheless, we are decreasing melt temperature by recovering faster in order have a shorter cycle. At this time we are increasing viscosity in the molted plastic. There are two things in play: 1) A colder melt will not be packed into the cavity as easy as hot melt will be, at this time pressure might not be enough, to pack the molded part due to the grater viscosity. That could drive the cushion higher. 2) If the check valve is slightly by passing upon injection, now that viscosity is higher therefore it will by pass less, then the time when the polymer was hotter, “cushion will be higher.”
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