What is the Advantage and Disadvantage of Mold Making Services

Author: Morgan

May. 26, 2025

The Advantages and Disadvantages of Injection Molding - Protolabs

1. Efficient high production

Once you have developed the molds, the process is extremely fast with cycle times as short as 10 seconds. It is excellent for medium and high-volume production runs for anything from 10,000 parts to well over 100,000 depending on what molds you use. 

With competitive price and timely delivery, Qisheng sincerely hope to be your supplier and partner.

Sometimes you can increase production by using a multi cavity or family mold, where several parts are produced from one press to further increase the manufacturing rate.

If you are outsourcing your molding then it’s also important to consider an efficient front-end design and order process – take a look at our on demand manufacturing.

4. Large material choice

There is a huge range of plastic materials that you can select from depending on what properties you need from your final part. And you are not limited to plastic, Protolabs also offers liquid silicone rubber molding. 

You can even use fillers in the molding material, which adds greater strength to the completed part, and you have a huge range of colors to choose from as well.  Talk to us about what you need your part to achieve – there are generally a number of different options.

1. Initial cost

If you are committing to steel mold tools for high production volumes (100,000+) then it can take a great deal of time and machining to produce and this can be a significant capital cost. If you need lower volumes of parts then this will affect your cost per part price and it may be worth exploring other options such as using aluminum molds instead.

2. Initial lead times

It can take up to 12 weeks to produce steel tooling. If you need to get production running before this then take a look at our on-demand production; by using aluminum molds and digitizing our front-end process we can ship anything from 25 to 10,000+ parts in 15 working days or less from the point that you first upload your CAD. Sometimes parts shipped in as little as one day.

For very low production runs there are other technologies such as 3D printing or CNC machining which could provide a more cost-effective answer more quickly.

3. Design limitations

You will need to consider certain design elements, such as:

  • Using draft and radii to help ejection of the parts
  • Avoiding undercuts and sharp edges
  • Controlling wall thicknesses

You also need to consider where to place your gates, ejectors and cooling lines if aesthetics are important. And remember it’s also hard to change the design of a mold – you can remove part of the mold, or add plastic to your final part, but not the other way round.

For smaller production runs, 3D printing allows you to design virtually any shape or geometry that you require. As a rapidly developing technology there is an increasing number of plastic and other materials, even metal, that we can produce. 

4. Small part runs are not always cost effective

Most people think that they should only turn to injection molding for orders of 100,000+ parts; but there are other options when you can use this process for smaller production runs.

Using more affordable aluminium molds and quick turnaround times (as fast as a day) our on-demand service helps keep your per part cost down. It is ideal for anything between 10,000 and 25,000 parts, but can help control costs for production runs even smaller than this.

For low production runs measured in the hundreds or less then it is also worth exploring other manufacturing technologies such as 3D printing and CNC machining. With these technologies the cost per part will be lower and you will not face the initial set up costs or lead times involved in producing molds.

Advantages and Disadvantages of Injection Molding

Originally published on fastradius.com on March 23,

Injection molding involves injecting molten plastic into carefully designed molds before cooling and ejecting the final part. It’s a highly repeatable process that enables companies to create high volumes of identical plastic parts with good tolerances at a low cost per part.

Injection molding has numerous applications in a wide variety of industries — from the automotive industry to the medical industry — but it isn’t the best choice for every project. Before you decide whether or not to injection mold your part, carefully consider the injection molding pros and cons.

For more information, please visit Mold Making Services.

The Advantages of Injection Molding

Many manufacturers turn to injection molding because:

1. It allows for complex geometries with tight tolerances.

Injection molding allows for large volumes of uniform, complex parts. However, you must pay attention to vent and gate placements, weld lines, corner transitions, wall thickness, rib and boss design, and more to ease ejection and achieve precise parts.

With injection molding, you can easily achieve repeatable part tolerances of ± 0.500 mm (0.020’’). In some cases, you can even produce parts with tolerances of ± 0.125 mm (0.005’’), giving you parts that are accurate enough for most applications and comparable to 3D-printed or CNC machined parts.

2. It’s compatible with a wide range of materials and colors.

Today, there are over 25,000 engineered materials that are compatible with injection molding, including thermoplastics, thermosets, resins, and silicones. With all of these options, you’ll be able to find one that offers the right balance of physical, mechanical, and chemical properties. Commonly used materials include acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS), polyethylene (PE), polystyrene (PS), and polypropylene (PP). You can also use a mixture of materials to produce a part with the strength, impact resistance, or stiffness you need. For example, you might add glass fibers to your thermoplastic to create a strength-enhancing composite.

You also have a variety of options when it comes to colors. Consider using masterbatches, pre-colored resins, liquid colorants, or salt and pepper blends to achieve your desired color.

3. It’s very efficient.

While it can take several minutes — or even hours — to 3D print or CNC machine a single part, most injection molding cycles only last 10 to 60 seconds. Even if you have a complex geometry that takes around 120 seconds to mold, you can include several smaller parts in one larger mold. This helps maximize efficiency and gets the most out of each mold, allowing you to create hundreds of identical parts an hour at a low cost.

4. It offers high repeatability and reliability.

One of the main benefits of plastic injection molding is its high repeatability. Once you’ve created your mold, you can produce thousands of parts before needing to maintain your tooling. An aluminum mold will generally last between 5,000 and 10,000 cycles, and a full-scale steel production mold can last for over 100,000 cycles. Plus, since injection molding uses the same mold for each part, you’ll have identical products.

5. You can reuse material.

Though injection molding generates less post-production material waste than many other manufacturing processes, it still creates excess scraps. However, you can easily regrind, melt, and reuse any sprues, runners, or other leftover plastic parts to save on material and reduce material waste.

The Disadvantages of Injection Molding

There are plenty of advantages of plastic injection molding, but it’s not without its drawbacks. Some disadvantages include:

1. Start-up costs are high.

Since custom tooling must be created for each injection molded part, initial start-up costs are high and this isn’t economical for low-volume production runs. Tooling for a simple design and a small production run can cost between $2,000 and $5,000, but tooling for large, complex molds ready for full-scale production can cost several times that. Although you can reuse these molds again and again and save on tooling costs down the line, it’s worth considering how much molds cost upfront. An injection molding manufacturing partner can help you maximize your budget and refine your mold design so you can produce the best possible part for the best price.

2. Initial lead times are long.

A CNC machined part can be delivered within 5-10 days, and industrially 3D printed parts often have lead times of 3-5 days. However, injection molding has a longer lead time. It often takes 5-7 weeks to manufacture tooling and 2-4 weeks to produce and ship parts.

In part, this long lead time can be attributed to the complexity of the molds themselves. In addition to containing the negative of the part, these molds have complex runner and water cooling systems to facilitate material flow and faster cooling. It can take months of design and testing before the final mold is ready for production, and any design changes can further increase turnaround times.

With the help of a manufacturing partner’s expertise, you can avoid falling into common mold pitfalls that might set you back weeks and thousands of dollars. They can also help accelerate the design, testing, and production phases.

3. Design changes are expensive.

With 3D printing, you can simply upload a file and print a new part whenever you make a design change, but that’s not the case with injection molding. If you make a design change, you’ll likely need to create a new mold from scratch, which means pouring more time and money into your project.

To avoid costly design changes and ease the demolding process, avoid undercuts and sharp edges, ensure wall thicknesses are uniform, and add draft angles. If you need some guidance, an experienced manufacturing partner can offer expert design advice.

Injection Molding With SyBridge

Between its efficiency and high repeatability, injection molding has plenty to offer. However, it’s all too easy to make an expensive mistake that sets production back weeks. That’s where a trusted manufacturing partner can help.

Are you interested in learning more about Sheet Metal Stamping Die? Contact us today to secure an expert consultation!

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