Continue to Site

Eng-Tips is the largest engineering community on the Internet

Intelligent Work Forums for Engineering Professionals

  • Congratulations cowski on being selected by the Eng-Tips community for having the most helpful posts in the forums last week. Way to Go!

Low Friction Plastics

Status
Not open for further replies.

matthew851

Materials
Dec 10, 2002
2
I am looking for a plastic with a friction co-efficient of less than .15 yet has a Rockwell Hardness greater than 80. Acetal has not had sufficient lubricity and we have tried Acetal with 2%silicon which is better, but we are looking for even greater lubricity. It needs to be a class 2 material that does not emit or "leak".
 
Replies continue below

Recommended for you

What are you running it against. This can have as much of an effect as initial material choice.
One very happy combo is Acetal against Nylon, especially if the Acetal has Silicone in it and the Nylon has Molly and Graphite. I am not sure about the Class 2 Leakage.
Moulding conditions and additive packages , especially regards orientation and crystalinity can have signifficant effects on friction and wear. Regards
pat
 
Typically, our product makes surface contact against is carpeting. We have no control over the carpeting surface and it composition.
 
Difficult problem
Maybe something like bronze filled PTFE might be hard enough.
Maybe molly and graphite filled nylon 6.6 might be slippery enough. Regards
pat
 
high density polyethlyene is also pretty slick . Contact WL Gore . You can have your eqpt teflon coated as well . we use either a liner or a coating deoending on the application
 
Try ultra high molecular weight high density polyethylene(UHMWHDPE). Check the DuPont web site.
 
UHMW from one supplier is 67D Durometer/Rockwell R 64. garlandmfg.com
 
Ask Izovolta Group for such a material. You can find them on the web.

 
The ceramic, boron nitride, could be added to the resin to instill greater lubricity as well as temperature stability. It is also used as a mold release for an engineered resin at 8,000 psi and 800 F to make jet engine bearings and washers.

It is not appropriate in this forum to comercially promote a product, therefore if you require more information, please contact me directly on phoward@imscompany.com.
 
Is this the phoward I used to work with at ICI in Sydney in the late 70's

Regards
pat
 
Sorry Pat, no. I was in Corpus Christi, TX in the late 70's. Regards, Phillip
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Part and Inventory Search

Sponsor