jerzy
Mechanical
- Aug 26, 2001
- 68
I am running some initial samples on three molds using a heat-stabilized grade of nylon 6/6 colored with a light grey color concentrate. I have never run this grade of nylon before, but for over fifteen years I have used the same concentrate with a heat-stabilized grade of nylon 6 to mold many thousands of parts from four older molds.
The older molds are for similar but not identical parts and have larger gates and thicker walls.
The nylon 6/6 seems susceptible to light brown discoloration at weld areas and last parts of mold to fill
on some of the molds. This does not seem to be dieseling (black charring from trapped compressed gasses) because it seems to diminish with faster injection rate. I have had the problem with resin used right from the sealed bag, so over-drying is not the cause.
I am going to sample some of the nylon 6/6 without the grey concentrate to see if the colorant is causing problems.
The brown I detect looks like the browning that appears on the outside of purgings soon after they hit the air when leaving the nozzle. I would think oxidation is occurring: this brown doesn't appear when purgings are quenched.
Have any of you experienced similar problems with nylon, either heat-stabilized or not?
A side note: I have been impressed by the technical acumen shown by many of the posters on this forum.
Jerzy
The older molds are for similar but not identical parts and have larger gates and thicker walls.
The nylon 6/6 seems susceptible to light brown discoloration at weld areas and last parts of mold to fill
on some of the molds. This does not seem to be dieseling (black charring from trapped compressed gasses) because it seems to diminish with faster injection rate. I have had the problem with resin used right from the sealed bag, so over-drying is not the cause.
I am going to sample some of the nylon 6/6 without the grey concentrate to see if the colorant is causing problems.
The brown I detect looks like the browning that appears on the outside of purgings soon after they hit the air when leaving the nozzle. I would think oxidation is occurring: this brown doesn't appear when purgings are quenched.
Have any of you experienced similar problems with nylon, either heat-stabilized or not?
A side note: I have been impressed by the technical acumen shown by many of the posters on this forum.
Jerzy