They will respond to immersion in water. If the water is hot, the uptake will be quicker. If the water is over 60 deg C, the parts will be annealed and may change dimension compared to parts conditioned for a longer time at less than 60 deg C.
A real down and dirty test for moisture conditioning is to rattle the parts together. If they clink or tinkle, they are dry, if they have a dull sound, they are conditioned.
For a comparison, leave some parts in an oven at 120 deg C foe 24 hours, and other parts in hot water for 24 hours, then rattle both and listen to the difference.
By keeping the warehouse warm, when outside is very cold, you are effectively creating a dehumidifier, which will dry the mouldings a lot faster than if they were left outside. It is relative humidity that causes the drying, and as you heat the air, you reduce the relative humidity.
Before changing from nylon, I would very carefully consider why it was originally chosen, and whether or not there have been problems in the past.
The 6% to 8% humidity in the material as a drying condition has me a bit perplexed and concerned.
Nylon should be dried to below 0.3% moisture content in the nylon before moulding, and it should be conditioned to about 3% moisture content in the nylon to obtain normal properties in a normal open air environment.
If treated right, nylon is a very tough polymer. That's why it is used a lot in things like chair bases, high quality plastic hammer faces, high quality screwdriver handles, high quality power tool housings, fuel filters, carburetor parts, fuel pump parts, spray gun parts, all sorts of sail boat fittings, car engine parts like inlet manifold, radiator header tank etc. Xenoy would not survive many of these applications, no matter what the guy from GE says.
GE does have a reputation for having very enthusiastic salesmen. To get a balanced view, I would also seek advice from a few of the likes of DuPont, BASF, Ticona, RTP company, DSM and whoever Elf Atochem are now.
An alternative to 7% GF nylon 6.6 might be acetal, or unfilled nylon 6.6 or 25% GF 6, but it depends on what chemicals, what load, what temperatures, what mould shrinkage you now need as the mould is already made for 7% GF nylon 6.6
Regards
pat pprimmer@acay.com.au
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