injectieblow
Injectieblow, also known as injection blow molding, is a plastic forming process used to manufacture hollow parts such as bottles and containers by combining injection molding and blow molding. In the two-step variant, resin pellets are melted and injected into a mold to form a preform (parison) with the desired neck finish. The preform is then transferred to a second station where it is reheated and placed in a blow mold. Compressed air inflates the softened plastic, pushing it against the mold walls to create the final hollow part. A one-step variant integrates injection and blowing in a single machine, reducing handling but requiring more complex tooling.
Materials commonly used in injectieblow include PET, polypropylene, polyethylene terephthalate, polycarbonate and other thermoplastics suitable for
Advantages of injectieblow include high production rates for small to medium-sized parts, good control over wall
Limitations involve tooling complexity and cost, geometry constraints that favor certain bottle shapes over others, and
Historically, injection blow molding evolved as a two-step process alongside one-step variants, becoming a staple in