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To operate a polyurethane high pressure foaming injection machine correctly, you must follow a structured sequence: preheat and verify raw material temperatures (typically 20–25°C for polyol and isocyanate), set mixing ratios and injection pressure (commonly 100–180 bar), perform a test shot, confirm cream time and gel time, then run production. Skipping any step — especially pressure calibration or temperature stabilization — leads to inconsistent foam density, surface defects, or mold damage. This guide walks through every stage in practical detail.
محتوى
A polyurethane high pressure foaming injection machine is a specialized piece of manufacturing equipment that precisely meters, mixes, and injects two reactive liquid components — typically an isocyanate (Component A) and a combined polyether polyol blend (Component B) — into a mold or open cavity where they react and expand into finished PU foam parts.
Unlike low-pressure hand-pour systems, high-pressure machines use impingement mixing: the two components are injected at high velocity into a small mixing chamber where they collide and mix intimately in milliseconds. This produces more uniform cell structure, faster cycle times, and better surface quality — all critical for products such as automotive interiors, car seats, steering wheels, children's wheels, fitness equipment, mattresses, and decorative strips.
Conventional MDI or polymeric MDI. Highly reactive, moisture-sensitive. Stored and metered at controlled temperature, typically 20–22°C.
Combined polyether containing polyol, catalyst, surfactant, blowing agent (141B, F11, water foaming, or cyclopentane). Temperature: 22–25°C for consistent reactivity.
High-pressure impingement chamber where A and B collide at 100–180 bar. Self-cleaning plunger purges the head after each shot, preventing blockage.
Precision hydraulic or servo-driven piston pumps maintain the programmed A:B ratio (typically 1:1 to 1:2 by weight) within ±0.5% tolerance throughout the shot.
Preparation is where most foaming quality problems are either prevented or created. Complete the following checks every shift before the first production run.
The following sequence reflects the standard operating procedure for a polyurethane high pressure foaming injection machine running a typical rigid or flexible foam product. Times and values are illustrative — always follow your machine's specific program parameters.
Step 1 — System Warm-Up (20–40 minutes)
Switch on tank heaters, hose trace heating, and hydraulic power unit. Allow all temperature zones to reach set-point and stabilize. Do not pressurize the chemical circuits until temperatures are stable for at least 10 minutes. This prevents thermal shock to seals and ensures consistent material viscosity from the first shot.
Step 2 — Pressure Recirculation Check
With the mixing head in recirculation mode, bring Component A and Component B to operating pressure (typically 100–150 bar depending on the formulation). Observe both pressure gauges for stability — pressure should hold steady within ±3 bar. Hunting or fluctuating pressure indicates air in the circuit or a worn pump seal that must be addressed before production.
Step 3 — Flow Rate Calibration and Ratio Verification
Direct the output of each component into separate tared containers and trigger a timed calibration shot (typically 10–30 seconds). Weigh each container and calculate the actual A:B ratio. If it deviates by more than ±2% from the target ratio, adjust pump speed or stroke settings and repeat until within tolerance. This step is non-negotiable — an off-ratio mix will produce foam with incorrect density, hardness, or cell structure regardless of all other parameters.
Step 4 — Test Shot Into Open Cup
Fire a test shot into a paper or plastic cup (do not use mold). Immediately start a stopwatch and record cream time (when mixture begins to expand and lighten — typically 3–8 seconds for flexible foam), gel time (when a toothpick dragged across the surface pulls strings — typically 20–50 seconds), and tack-free time. Compare values against the product specification. If reaction times are off, the likely causes are material temperature deviation, off-ratio mix, or degraded catalyst in the polyol blend.
Step 5 — Mold Preparation and Release Agent Application
Apply mold release agent evenly to all mold surfaces. Allow solvent carrier to flash off completely (typically 30–60 seconds at room temperature) before closing the mold. New molds require 3–5 seasoning shots with heavy release agent before they can be run on a reduced-release schedule. Confirm mold temperature is within spec — most flexible PU products require mold temperatures of 45–65°C for optimum surface quality and cure speed.
Step 6 — Production Injection
Close and clamp the mold. Position the mixing head at the injection gate. Trigger the injection cycle — the machine's PLC will execute the programmed shot time, controlling flow and pressure through the mixing head automatically. For products requiring fill from multiple gates or a moving pour, the program handles this via a pre-set motion profile. After injection, the head automatically purges with the cleaning plunger.
Step 7 — Cure, Demold, and First-Part Inspection
Allow the foam to cure in the mold for the prescribed cure time before demolding. Premature demolding causes part deformation — for automotive seat foam at 55°C mold temperature, minimum cure time is typically 3–5 minutes. After demolding, allow parts to equilibrate at room temperature for at least 30 minutes before dimensional inspection. Check density (cut and weigh a sample cube), hardness (ILD test for flexible foam), and visual surface quality against standards before approving the first full production batch.
Understanding how each process variable influences the final product is essential for rapid troubleshooting. The chart below summarizes the relative impact of common parameter deviations on foam quality outcomes, based on field data from polyurethane high pressure foaming production environments.
Relative Impact of Parameter Deviation on Foam Quality (% defect rate increase)
Based on aggregate field data from polyurethane foam production facilities. Values represent typical defect rate increase vs. in-spec baseline.
| Parameter | Flexible Foam (e.g. Seat / Mattress) | Rigid Foam (e.g. Insulation Panel) | Integral Skin (e.g. Steering Wheel) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Polyol Temperature | 22–25°C | 20–24°C | 24–28°C |
| Isocyanate Temperature | 20–22°C | 20–22°C | 22–25°C |
| Injection Pressure | 100–130 bar | 130–180 bar | 120–160 bar |
| A:B Ratio (by weight) | 1:1 to 1:1.5 | 1:1.2 to 1:1.8 | 1:1 to 1:1.3 |
| Mold Temperature | 45–65°C | 35–50°C | 50–65°C |
| Minimum Cure Time in Mold | 3–5 min | 5–10 min | 4–6 min |
| Cream Time (target) | 4–8 sec | 2–5 sec | 3–6 sec |
Selecting the right blowing agent significantly affects the process parameters on your polyurethane high pressure foaming injection machine. Each method has distinct handling requirements, foam properties, and regulatory considerations.
Blowing Agent Comparison: Water vs 141B vs Cyclopentane (5-axis)
Most environmentally friendly option. CO₂ generated in-situ acts as blowing agent. Widely used for flexible foam seats and mattresses. Slightly higher machine operating temperature required.
Produces fine, uniform closed-cell structure ideal for rigid insulation and integral skin parts. Subject to phase-down regulations in many regions; check local compliance before specifying.
Zero ODP, low GWP. Produces excellent thermal insulation values in rigid foam. Requires explosion-proof machine construction and ventilation. Used extensively in refrigerator and freezer panel lines.
Legacy blowing agent largely phased out under the Montreal Protocol. Some legacy equipment may still reference F11 formulations; modern replacement is typically 141B or cyclopentane depending on application.
When a polyurethane foaming injection machine produces defective parts, the cause is almost always traceable to one of a small number of root causes. Use the following guide to narrow down the issue quickly.
Production Defect Frequency by Root Cause Category (%)
| Defect Symptom | Most Likely Cause | Corrective Action |
|---|---|---|
| Low density / under-filled mold | Under-shot weight, A:B ratio too high on isocyanate | Increase shot weight 5% increments; re-check ratio calibration |
| Surface voids / pinholes | Mold temperature too low, inadequate venting | Raise mold temperature 5°C; check vent locations for blockage |
| Coarse, non-uniform cell structure | Mixing pressure too low, contaminated mixing head | Increase impingement pressure; flush and inspect mixing head |
| Part sticking to mold | Insufficient release agent, premature demold | Apply additional release agent; extend cure time in mold |
| Foam collapse after demold | Premature demold, catalyst level too low | Extend in-mold cure time; verify polyol blend freshness and catalyst concentration |
| Hard skin, soft core | Mold temperature too high, over-curing surface | Reduce mold temperature 3–5°C; check heat distribution uniformity |
A well-maintained polyurethane foaming machine can run reliably for 10–15 years or more. Reactive chemicals, high pressures, and tight tolerances mean that deferred maintenance quickly escalates into costly repairs and production losses.
Ningbo Xinliang Machinery Co., Ltd. is an enterprise combining industry and trade, dedicated to producing polyurethane foaming equipment, polyurethane foaming production lines, and cyclopentane polyurethane foaming complete equipment. As a professional high-tech enterprise specializing in polyurethane foaming equipment research, development, manufacturing, and technical services, Xinliang brings over ten years of specialized design experience to every project.
The company's polyurethane high pressure foaming injection machine is compatible with 141B, F11, water foaming, and cyclopentane foaming methods, and can handle all major PU product categories — from children's wheels and fitness equipment to automotive interiors, car seats, steering wheels, decorative strips, headrests, and mattresses. The machines adopt advanced high-pressure impingement mixing technology, ensuring uniform foam and precise flow and pressure control.
The proprietary control software has been continuously optimized over 10 years, resulting in a system that is stable, easy to operate, and efficient for production workers. Xinliang serves as both a custom polyurethane high pressure foaming injection machine supplier and an OEM manufacturer, relying on Zhejiang's strong industrial foundation and a development philosophy of "scientific and technological innovation, pursuit of specialization" to deliver customized solutions for the global polyurethane industry.
10+ Years
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