A mold designed for automotive under-hood components differs dramatically from one built for medical device housings. While injection molding fundamentals remain constant, each industry imposes unique requirements on mold design, material selection, quality systems, and documentation.
Automotive Industry Requirements
Automotive molds require robust construction for high-cavity counts and long production runs. Multi-cavity molds (4-32 cavities) with hot runner systems maximize throughput. Steel selection typically involves hardened tool steel (H13, S7) for abrasion resistance with glass-filled nylons. Statistical process control (SPC) and PPAP documentation are mandatory.
Medical Device Requirements
Medical molds prioritize cleanability and validation. Designs eliminate areas where material can accumulate or degrade. Polished surfaces (SPI A-1 or better) facilitate cleaning and inspection. Mold materials must resist corrosion from cleaning agents and repeated sterilization cycles. Process validation requires documented capability studies demonstrating Cpk ≥ 1.33 for critical dimensions.
Electronics Industry Requirements
Electronics molds often incorporate intricate details for snaps, clips, and mounting features. Tolerances are tight to ensure proper fit with electronic components. When using flame-retardant or conductive nylons, consider material abrasiveness and select mold materials accordingly. Surface finish requirements vary—textured finishes may hide scratches while polished surfaces improve EMI coating adhesion.
Consumer Products Requirements
Consumer product molds balance cost and capability. Family molds producing multiple parts in one shot reduce tooling investment. Surface finishes range from high-gloss polish to custom textures—requiring proper draft angles and ejection design. Color changes may be frequent, influencing runner system selection.
| Anforderung | Automobilindustrie | Medizinische | Elektronik | Consumer |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Typical volume | 100K-1M+ | 10K-500K | 50K-2M | 25K-500K |
| Mold life target | 1M+ cycles | 500K cycles | 500K-1M | 250K-500K |
| Documentation | PPAP Level 3-5 | Full DHR, validation | PPAP, UL testing | Basic quality records |
Frequently Asked Questions
Can one mold serve multiple industries?
A mold built to automotive or medical standards can certainly produce parts for less demanding applications. However, molds designed for lower-tier industries may not meet documentation, validation, or life requirements of higher-tier applications.
What mold steel is recommended for glass-filled nylon?
For glass-filled nylon production, hardened tool steels like H13 (48-52 HRC) or S7 provide best wear resistance. For extreme wear applications, consider inserts made from carbide or hardened DC53. Standard P20 steel is adequate for unfilled nylon but will wear faster with reinforced materials.
How does cleanroom molding affect mold design?
Cleanroom molds should minimize particulate generation—avoid external lubricants, specify smooth surfaces without texture that can trap debris, and design for easy cleaning. Some applications require specialized venting to prevent contamination from mold release agents.
What is the cost difference between industry-grade molds?
Medical and automotive molds typically cost 30-50% more than consumer product molds due to documentation, validation requirements, higher-grade materials, and longer life specifications. Electronics molds fall in the middle depending on precision requirements.

