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| Part Design |
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The design of a part
for Thermo Pressure Forming, like the design of a part to be made by any
other plastic process, starts with the designer's creation of a shape
or structure that will satisfy the functional requirements of the product
in its final end-use environment.
Once the functional
requirements are clearly understood and a basic shape has been evolved,
the designer then turns his attention to what materials and fabrication
techniques are available to produce the part. There are many materials
and process options available to the designer and he is not limited to
plastic materials. However, for the sake of this booklet, our considerations
will be limited to plastics as the medium of construction.
All successful plastic
products or parts can be thought of as being surrounded or protected by
the four basic elements that all plastic parts have in common

These basic elements
are: (1) the design of the part; (2) the selection of the ideal plastic
material; (3) the design and construction of the tooling; and (4) the
processing or forming and finishing of the part. All four of these elements
must be handled correctly in order to produce the optimum plastic part.
A successful product
starts with a good quality part drawing. A good part drawing is the
result of a designer's knowledge of the capabilities and limitations of
the chosen material, tooling and process, coupled with a meticulous attention
to design details. Unfortunately, it is not possible for a designer
to produce the optimum part design or drawing without first acquiring
at least a basic understanding of the capabilities and limitations of
the specific material, the chosen process and its unique tooling. In other
words, a plastic part must be proportioned according to the requirements
of the material, the tooling and the process.
To ignore or mishandle
any one of these four basic elements will result in a less-than-best product.
There will then be a break in the inherently strong circle that should
surround and protect a successful plastic product. Once the circle is
broken, the product will suffer due to unnecessary high tooling or piece
part cost, poor quality, inadequate strength, appearance problems, a lack
of customer satisfaction, or all of the above.
While struggling
to satisfy these four basic requirements, the designer must not lose sight
of the functional requirements of the part in its end-use environment.
Simultaneously satisfying all of these requirements often necessitates
painful compromise decisions. For example, injection molding is your first
choice; however, marketing will not wait for the long tool delivery schedule;
the product would be stronger in polycarbonate but the competitive nature
of the market will not tolerate the increased material cost, etc.
The design and development
of a plastic product is never as easy as the designer is led to believe
it will be. This booklet has been produced to answer the designer's questions
and quickly teach him what he needs to know in order to consider the advantages
of Thermo Pressure Forming for his new plastic product.
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