by POLYnnovation on Mon Jan 25, 2010 2:44 pm
Hi There,
Some time since I visited forum, so apologies for the delayed addition.
Lots of sensible comments already made on filler content, S.G., cycle time, etc.
I guess you mean you want to increase torsional rigidity.That being the case, ribs running diagonally will be FAR more efficient in stiffening the tray than running end-to-end or cross-wise. See the image of the seed tray I designed in the 1970's. Much lighter than its predecessor, but much stiffer.
Even better use of material is to run a thick bead around the periphery at the top (rather than a simple flange, with its own rib network, as you see in the photos) and bottom (around the edge), then use gas or water assist to hollow it out (see Cinpres site, for instance). Needs tooling changes, a moulder that's licensed and the actual harware to do it. You'll get either one or two so-called "torsion boxes" by doing this and by far the best stiffness-to-weight ratio. It's a design trick" used often for automotive door pockets.
Thickening the section (even without ribs), then using enough blowing agent to take the density down by a percentage greater than the thickness gain will also give HUGE stiffness increases (basic structural engineering - section modulus, moment of inertia, etc.). Otherwise, Mucell, or similar technology to create foamed structure. Cosmetics will be very different (not necessarily inferior, depending on expectations), as swirl patterns will be evident.
In conclusion, increasing the material's inherent stiffness (modulus) will increase the part's stiffnes, but only pro rata. Diagonal ribbing, hollow beads or foaming the material and thickening the section (or a combination of all three approaches) uses macro- or micro-shaping to increase stiffness exponentially.
Regards,
John McLoughlin POLYnnovation
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.