Multi-Cavity Cosmetic Moulds for High-Output Production
Cosmetic packaging sits at an interesting intersection — it needs to function reliably as a container while also carrying the visual identity of the brand. That dual requirement puts considerable pressure on the mould design, where structural performance and surface appearance have to be achieved together rather than traded off against each other.
Hot runner systems have become widely adopted in cosmetic moulds for good reason. By keeping the plastic in a molten state through a heated manifold directly to each cavity gate, hot runners eliminate the cold runner waste generated in conventional systems. For cosmetic packaging where materials like PMMA and transparent PC are expensive and color-matched, reducing sprues and runners has a direct impact on material efficiency per shot.
Gate location in a cosmetic mould isn't just a flow question — it's an aesthetic one. A visible gate mark on a glossy compact lid or a perfume bottle cap is a quality rejection. Submarine gates, tunnel gates, and pin-point gates through hot runner tips are all used to position the entry point in a hidden or low-visibility area of the part. Edge gates may be used on internal surfaces that aren't seen after assembly.
Tolerances in cosmetic mould work tend to be tighter than in general industrial moulding. A compact lid that fits loosely, a mascara cap that requires excessive force to remove, or a powder sifter tray that rattles in its housing are all fit and function failures rooted in dimensional control. Steel machining to ±0.005 mm on critical mating surfaces, combined with rigorous first-article inspection, is standard practice before a mould enters production.
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