Harboro Rubber homeFlash Version
About Harboro Rubber
Engineering in Rubber
     Contents
     Introduction
     Uses of Rubber
     Processing Rubber
         Compounding
         Mixing
         Pre-Forming
         Moulding
             Compression
             Transfer Injection
             Direct Injection
         Finishing
     Designing With Rubber
     Selecting / Specifying Rubber
     Quality In Rubber
     Rubber Directory
     Health & Safety
     Measuring Properties
     Glossary of Terms
     Request A Copy
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Direct Injection


A screw injection system delivers a metered quantity of rubber into the closed mould. The injection unit is fed from a continuous strip or a reservoir of uncured rubber and is cooled to avoid premature curing.

This process is generally used for multi-cavity moulds and can produce hundreds of components per press cycle. Because of the amount of rubber in the system, it is inadvisable to change materials frequently

Large moulds require complex feed systems to balance the pressures in each cavity. Generally these are in the heated top half of the mould and cure at the same time as the components. Unlike thermoplastics, cured thermoset rubber cannot be reground or reused and the additional waste has to be included in the material usage per piece. Where very large volumes of mouldings are required, cold runner systems should be considered. These are justified by material savings over £10,000 pa.

This process lends itself to relatively large quantities, a large number of cavities and infrequent changes of materials or moulds. Parts are repeatable and can be made to a high level of precision.