I learned mold maintenance the hard way—by having a mold fail in the middle of production on a Friday afternoon. The customer was furious, the production manager was pacing, and I was standing there holding a broken core pin, wondering how much this was going to cost me.
Since then, I have picked up a few habits that keep molds running smoothly for hundreds of thousands of cycles. Here is what actually matters.
1. Clean the Cooling Channels Every 50k Cycles
This is the number one cause of mold problems that people ignore. Scale and sediment build up in the cooling lines, reducing heat transfer. Your cycle time creeps up, parts start sticking, and you wonder why. A simple flush with a descaling solution every 50,000 cycles prevents this entirely. I use a closed-loop flushing system, but even a garden hose with a brush attachment works better than nothing.
2. Check the Ejector Pins
Ejector pins wear out faster than most people realize. After about 100,000 cycles, check for galling, bending, or flashing around the pin holes. Replace them in sets, not one at a time. Mixing old and new pins causes uneven ejection and can damage the part.
3. Lubricate Moving Components
Slides, lifters, and core pulls need regular lubrication. But here is the trick: use the right grease for your mold temperature. Standard grease breaks down above 80°C. For hot molds running engineering plastics, use high-temperature grease rated for 200°C+. I have seen molds seize up because someone used the wrong lubricant.
4. Torque the Bolts Properly
Stripped or overtightened bolt holes are a common issue in molds that have been serviced by different technicians. Use a torque wrench. Mark each bolt with a paint dot after torquing so the next person knows it was done right. I learned this after finding three loose bolts on a mold that had just been serviced by another shop.
5. Keep a Mold History Log
Every time a mold comes out of the press, record the cycle count, any issues found, and what maintenance was done. Six months later, that log will tell you exactly when to expect wear patterns. A proper mold history is the difference between planned maintenance and emergency breakdowns.
6. Watch the Vent Depth
Vents clog up over time, especially if you are running filled materials. Check vent depth with a feeler gauge. For unfilled materials, 0.03mm is typical. For glass-filled materials, 0.05mm. If the vents are too deep, you get flashing. Too shallow, trapped gas causes burn marks.
7. Store Molds Properly
When a mold is not running, spray all steel surfaces with rust inhibitor, close it under light pressure, and store it on a rack—not on the floor. I have seen molds stored on pallets that got knocked over by a forklift. A good injection mold maker will design the mold with storage in mind, including lifting holes and stackable protection plates.
8. Inspect the Hot Runner System
Hot runner tips wear out. Nozzle tips, torpedoes, and heaters degrade over time. If you start seeing stringing, drooling, or inconsistent fill patterns, check the hot runner before assuming the mold design is wrong. I once spent three days troubleshooting a mold only to find a worn needle valve tip was the culprit.
9. Train Your Technicians
The best mold in the world will fail fast if the technician does not know how to handle it. I make sure every technician on the floor knows how to disassemble and reassemble each mold type we run. A 30-minute training session can save hours of troubleshooting later.
10. Call the Mold Maker When in Doubt
Modifying a mold without consulting the original injection mold manufacturer is a recipe for disaster. I have seen technicians grind down a core to fix a sink mark, only to discover the real issue was insufficient packing pressure. If you are not sure, pick up the phone. Most mold makers are happy to help—it saves them warranty headaches too.
About the author: I have been working with injection molds for 15 years and currently partner with VHP Tooling on complex mold projects. The lessons above come from real production experience, not textbooks.