Designing an injection machine for keyboard science
Posted: 07 Jul 2020, 04:32
Hello guys. As some of you know I'm working in a very complex keyboard project, where I'm forced to work with custom parts. For a finished product 3D printing or CNC is not even an option, so I'm trying to make my way into injection moulding, but as you may know, that's EXPENSIVE AS FUCK. So far I decided that I may do my own injection machine to start making some prototypes, here's what I designed, hopefully someone will find the concept useful:

Let me explain how this thing works. First at all, the heating element is composed of four 110V electric oven candles, controlled by an Arduino via a relay. A PT100 or so sensor is connected to provide actual feedback of the temperature and mantain it at the desired level. Like so:

A tiny keypad will be added to select the temperature for any desired plastic.
The candles are fitted inside the darker bottom piece, where the plastic beads actually go. Up we have a mobile part which looks very similar, there's were we make the pressure by pulling down the lever, returned by one or maybe two springs trapped in the central frame.
Let's take a look of the first mold, I took different perspectives so you can appreciate the shapes better:

Aaaaand that's my first keycap
What do you think, will this work?

Let me explain how this thing works. First at all, the heating element is composed of four 110V electric oven candles, controlled by an Arduino via a relay. A PT100 or so sensor is connected to provide actual feedback of the temperature and mantain it at the desired level. Like so:

A tiny keypad will be added to select the temperature for any desired plastic.
The candles are fitted inside the darker bottom piece, where the plastic beads actually go. Up we have a mobile part which looks very similar, there's were we make the pressure by pulling down the lever, returned by one or maybe two springs trapped in the central frame.
Let's take a look of the first mold, I took different perspectives so you can appreciate the shapes better:

Aaaaand that's my first keycap
