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Qu'est-ce qu'un moule en plastique ?

What Is Plastic Mold

Published: Jul 2018 · Last updated: Jan 2026

📌 What’s new in 2026: Updated cost ranges for current steel prices, added conformal cooling and IoT mold sensor sections, and revised lead time estimates based on 2025–2026 industry data.

A plastic mold is a precision tool that shapes molten plastic into finished parts through processes such as injection, blow, compression, transfer, and rotational molding. At its core are the cavité (the negative of the external shape) and the noyau (which forms internal features). Liquid plastic is injected, cooled, solidified, and ejected in a repeatable cycle. Standard mold steels include P20, H13, and S136 stainless, while prototypes are typically made using CNC machining, 3D printing, or vacuum casting.

Injection Mold Structure

Interactive Engineering Guide — Click markers to explore components

Injection Mold Structure

Select a component from the diagram or list to view technical details.

ComposantFonction principaleNotes clés
CavitéDéfinit la géométrie extérieure et les surfaces cosmétiques.Controls appearance grade, surface finish, and texture.
Cœur de métierForme la géométrie interne (bossages, nervures, trous).Essentiel pour les caractéristiques structurelles et la stabilité dimensionnelle.
Système de refroidissementGérer le temps de cycle et la stabilité dimensionnelle.Des conduites d'eau, des déflecteurs ou des canaux conformes optimisent l'évacuation de la chaleur.
Système d'éjectionSafely releases the part from the mold without damage.Goupilles d'éjection, manchons, poussoirs et soupapes d'air ; la synchronisation et l'emplacement sont importants.
Système de coureursDelivers melt evenly to each cavity (hot or cold runner).Includes sprue, runners, and gates; balance flow to avoid defects. 2-plate or 3-plate configuration.

Apprendre les bases des moules en plastique

Before selecting a tool, it helps to align on definitions and structure. Below is a brief overview of how a mold is built and how the molding cycle works.

Définition et principales composantes

A plastic mold is built around two main forming sections: the cavity side, which shapes the outer surface of the part, and the core side, which forms internal features such as ribs, bosses, holes, and undercuts. Around these forming areas, the mold also includes the runner and gate system, cooling channels, ejector system, guide components, and support plates. Together, these components control how the molten plastic flows, cools, shrinks, and is finally released from the mold.

In the injection molding cycle, plastic is melted and injected into the mold cavity under high pressure from the press, and hardens during cooling. Once cooled, the mold opens and the part is ejected — then the cycle repeats. Part quality depends on plastic material, mold steel, geometry, gating, cooling layout, and the ejection method.

Lecture connexe : Nos services de fabrication de moules

What Are the Main Types of Plastic Mold?

There are six main types of plastic mold, each suited to different part shapes, volumes, and budgets. Moulage par injection is the most versatile for complex, high-volume parts. Moulage par soufflage creates hollow containers. Moulage par compression works best for large flat thermoset parts. Extrusion produces continuous profiles like pipes. Moulage par rotation makes large hollow items. Thermoformage shapes heated sheets over a mold for packaging and panels.

TypeMeilleur pourTypical Products
Moule à injectionComplex, high-volume partsAuto parts, electronics, medical devices
Blow MoldHollow containersBottles, fuel tanks, drums
Compression MoldLarge flat/curved thermoset partsElectrical panels, body panels
Extrusion MoldContinuous cross-section profilesPipes, tubing, window frames
Rotational MoldLarge hollow partsTanks, kayaks, playground equipment
ThermoformageShallow parts from heated sheetsFood trays, packaging, dashboards

Comment fonctionne le moulage plastique ?

Below is the complete workflow, using injection molding as the anchor example. The same logic applies broadly across other molding methods.

Étape 1 : Phase de conception (Timeline: ~1 week)

  • CAD design: Part and mold 3D/2D, GD&T, draft, and tolerances.
  • DFM analysis: Wall thickness, ribs, radii — to reduce warpage and sink marks.
  • Moldflow analysis: Filling balance, weld lines, air traps, cooling, and deflection prediction.

Étape 2 : Fabrication du moule (Délai : 2-6 semaines)

  • Material selection: P20, H13, S136, or aluminum — based on life expectancy, resin, and corrosion risk.
  • CNC machining: Rough and finish passes for geometric accuracy; electrodes prepared for EDM.
  • EDM machining: Deep pockets, sharp corners, complex details.
  • Polishing & texturing: Optical polish (SPI A1/A2) or textures (VDI/MT).
  • Assemblage : Guides, ejectors, waterlines, hot runner (if applicable).

Étape 3 : Essais et validation (Délai : 1-2 semaines)

  • T0/T1 trials: Establish process window; evaluate dimensions and cosmetics.
  • Inspection: CMM, optical measurement; define a golden sample.
  • Optimization: Gate tweaks, venting, cooling balance, steel-safe adjustments.

Étape 4 : Production en série

  • Stable runs: Repeatable temperatures, pressures, and timing.
  • Quality control: FAI, in-process SPC, and final checks.
  • Maintenance: Cleaning, lubrication, waterline descaling, and spare-parts management.

Matériaux utilisés dans les moules en plastique

Selecting the right mold steel and resin pairing drives lifespan, cycle time, and piece price — especially for glass-filled or corrosive materials.

Matériaux courants pour les moules

MatériauPropriétésApplicationsCoût
Acier P20Pré-trempé, polyvalent, économiqueMoules de volume moyen$
Acier H13Dureté élevée, résistance à l'usure et à la chaleurRésines à haut volume remplies de verre$$
S136 InoxRésistant à la corrosion, haute brillanceMédical, alimentaire, pièces transparentes$$$
AluminiumHaute conductivité, usinage rapidePrototypes, petites séries$

Matières plastiques pour le moulage

  • ABS : Résistant et stable ; excellent pour les boîtiers cosmétiques.
  • Polypropylène (PP) : Light and chemical-resistant; packaging and appliances.
  • Polyéthylène (PE) : Résistant ; courant dans les bouteilles et récipients moulés par soufflage.
  • Polycarbonate (PC) : Clair et solide ; pièces optiques et de protection.
  • Nylon (PA) : Résistant à l'usure et à la chaleur ; engrenages et composants structurels.

Why Are Plastic Molds So Expensive?

Plastic molds require high-grade steel, precision CNC/EDM machining (tolerances ±0.02–0.05 mm), skilled engineering design, and hours of polishing and assembly. CNC machining alone accounts for 25–40% of total cost. Complex features like slides, lifters, and hot runners add significantly to both engineering and machining time.

Facteurs influençant le coût des moules

Complexité des pièces — Basic: $2,000–$5,000 · Intermediate: $5,000–$20,000 · Advanced: $20,000–$100,000+ (e.g., mirror gloss, lifters/slides, micro features).

Taille du moule — Small (<500 mm) · Medium (500–1,000 mm) · Large (>1,000 mm). Larger tools require more steel, machining, and cooling complexity.

Exigences en matière de volume — Prototype: 200–1,000 shots · Low production: 1,000–10,000 · High production: 10,000–100,000+ (hot runners and automation typical).

Sélection des matériaux — Tool steel grade; surface treatments (nitriding, PVD, hard chrome); special needs (SPI optical polish, Textures VDI/MT, contrôle de la corrosion).

Numéro de la cavité — Single cavity · Multi-cavity (2–64) · Family mold. Multi-cavity requires precise flow and shrink balance.

Exigences de tolérance — Standard ±0.1 mm · Precision ±0.02 mm · Ultra-precision ±0.01 mm (requires environment control).

Cost CategoryShare of Total
Design & Engineering (CAD, DFM, Moldflow)15–30%
Steel / Raw Material15–30%
CNC Machining & EDM25–40%
Polishing, Texturing & Assembly10-20%
Type de moulePrice Range (USD)
Simple prototype (aluminum, single cavity)$2,000 – $5,000
Standard production (P20, 1–2 slides)$5,000 – $15,000
Medium complexity (2–4 cavities, hot runner)$15,000 – $50,000
High complexity (multi-cavity, full hot runner)$50,000 – $150,000
Ultra-precision (16–64 cavities)$150,000 – $500,000+

Conseils pour réduire les coûts

  • Optimize part design early with DFM to eliminate slides, hotspots, and sink marks.
  • Match cavity count and machine tonnage to actual demand — not maximum theoretical demand.
  • Use standard components and modular inserts where possible.
  • Order in larger batches to amortize tooling cost across more parts.
  • Partner with experienced manufacturers to reduce mold trial iterations.
Mold Cost Calculator Widget
Plastic mold runner system showing sprue, runners, and gates

How Long Does a Plastic Mold Last?

Mold lifespan is measured in injection cycles. Hardened steel molds (H13, S136) last 500 000 à 1 000 000+ cycles. Pre-hardened steel (P20) handles 200,000–500,000 cycles. Aluminum molds suit prototyping at 10,000–100,000 cycles. Abrasive resins like glass-filled nylon wear molds 3–5× faster. Regular maintenance — cleaning, lubrication, and inspection every 50,000 cycles — can extend mold life by 30–50%.

Mold MaterialDurée de vie prévueBest Application
Hardened Steel (H13 / S136)500,000 – 1,000,000+ cyclesHigh-volume production
Pre-hardened Steel (P20 / 2738)200,000 – 500,000 cyclesMedium-volume production
Aluminium (7075 / 6061)10,000 – 100,000 cyclesPrototyping & low-volume
Soft Metal / Epoxy500 – 5,000 cyclesPrototyping only

Quality Control in Plastic Mold

Quality is built in through precise measurement, documentation, and adherence to industry standards.

Méthodes d'inspection

  • CMM (machine à mesurer les coordonnées)
  • Mesures optiques et profilométrie
  • Contrôle de l'état de surface (Ra, brillance)
  • Inspection du premier article (FAI), PPAP pour l'automobile

Normes industrielles

  • Normes dimensionnelles et de tolérance ANSI/ASME, DIN, JIS
  • Pratiques PPAP et APQP pour l'industrie automobile
  • Device History Records for medical applications

Défis communs et solutions

Most molding issues can be prevented with proactive design and process tuning. Below are frequent problems and how they are addressed.

Déformation et défauts de surface dans le moulage des matières plastiques

1. SELECT DEFECT TO TROUBLESHOOT:

Black Specks
Blisters
Blush
Bowing
Brittleness
Marques de brûlure
Clear Spots
Contamination
Cracking
Flash
Lignes d'écoulement
Gloss
Jetting
Coups de feu
Rétrécissement
Silver Streaking
Les vides
Injection molding troubleshooting guide for warping and surface defects

New capabilities are directly translating into shorter cycles, better quality, and faster launches.

  • 3D Printing Integration — Additive manufacturing enables rapid inserts and conformal cooling channels that follow the part geometry, delivering faster and more even cooling and significant cycle time reduction.
  • Smart Molds (IoT Sensors) — Embedded temperature and pressure sensors enable data-driven process control, fewer defects, faster setups, and real-time process windows.
  • Sustainable Materials — Recyclable and bio-based resins, combined with modular cores and replaceable inserts, extend tool life and reduce waste.
  • AI-Based Design Optimization — AI-assisted parameter setting, defect prediction, and automated gate/cooling layout reduce trial iterations and shorten time-to-market.

Questions fréquemment posées

Ten essential questions about plastic molds, answered.

1. What is a plastic mold?

A plastic mold is a precision tool used in injection molding to make plastic parts from an injection molding machine. It has two major sections: the cavité (which forms the outside) and the noyau (which forms the inside). When molten plastic is injected at high pressure, it fills the space between these components, cools, solidifies, and is released from the mold as the finished part.

Molds are usually built from hardened steel or aluminum and range from simple single-cavity tools to highly complex multi-cavity systems that produce more than 10 parts per cycle.

2. How does plastic injection molding work?

The injection molding process follows four key steps:

  • Clamping: The mold closes and is held together by the injection molding machine.
  • Injection: High pressure pushes molten plastic into the mold cavity through the runner and gate.
  • Cooling: The heated plastic cools and solidifies inside the mold.
  • Ejection: The mold opens and the finished part is ejected.

This cycle typically takes from 15 seconds to 2 minutes, depending on part size and complexity.

3. What materials are used to make plastic molds?

  • P20 Steel: Pre-hardened steel ideal for medium-volume production (200,000–500,000 cycles). Good balance of cost and durability.
  • H13 Steel: Tool steel for high-volume production (500,000–1,000,000+ cycles). Excellent wear resistance and can be heat-treated.
  • S136 Steel: Stainless steel with good corrosion resistance for medical parts, transparent components, or corrosive resins.
  • Aluminum (7075, 6061): Used for prototype molds or low-volume production. Quick to machine and lower cost, but with shorter lifespan.

4. How long does it take to make a plastic mold?

The typical timeline is 6–10 weeks:

  • Weeks 1–2: Design phase — CAD modeling, DFM analysis, moldflow simulation.
  • Weeks 3–8: CNC machining, EDM, polishing, and assembly.
  • Weeks 9–10: Mold trials, testing, and optimization.

Complex molds with multi-action slides, lifters, or hot runner systems may require 6–12 weeks. Parallel engineering (pre-ordering standard components) can reduce lead time by 10–20%.

5. How much does a plastic mold cost?

Mold costs vary significantly based on complexity:

  • Simple single-cavity molds: $2,000 – $10,000
  • Medium complexity (2–4 cavities): $10,000 – $30,000
  • Complex multi-cavity molds: $30,000 – $100,000+
  • High-precision or family molds: $100,000 – $300,000+

Cost drivers include cavity count, part size and complexity, tolerance, surface finish, mold material, hot vs. cold runner, and production volume requirements.

6. What is the lifespan of a plastic mold?

Mold lifespan ranges from 50,000 to 1,000,000+ cycles, depending on:

  • Mold material: Aluminum (50,000–100,000), P20 steel (200,000–500,000), H13 steel (500,000–1,000,000+).
  • Resin type: Abrasive materials like glass-filled nylon wear molds faster than standard plastics.
  • Maintenance: Regular cleaning, lubrication, and preventive care significantly extend life.
  • Operating conditions: Proper temperature control, injection pressure, and cooling management reduce wear.

7. What types of plastic molds are there?

  • Single-cavity molds: Produce one part per cycle. Best for large parts or low-volume production.
  • Multi-cavity molds: Produce multiple identical parts per cycle. Ideal for high-volume production and lower per-part cost.
  • Family molds: Produce different parts in one cycle. Useful when multiple components are needed together.
  • Hot runner molds: Heated channels keep plastic molten, eliminating runner waste and reducing cycle time.
  • Cold runner molds: Unheated channels where plastic solidifies and must be removed. Lower initial cost, more material waste.

8. What plastics can be used in injection molding?

  • ABS : Strong, impact-resistant, good surface finish. Used in automotive, electronics, toys.
  • Polypropylène (PP) : Chemical resistant, flexible, low cost. Used in containers, packaging, medical devices.
  • Polycarbonate (PC) : Transparent, high impact strength. Used in lenses, safety equipment, electronics.
  • Nylon (PA) : High strength, wear resistant. Used in gears, bearings, mechanical parts.
  • Polyéthylène (PE) : Flexible, chemical resistant. Used in bottles, films, containers.

9. What is moldflow analysis and why is it important?

Moldflow analysis is a computer simulation that predicts how molten plastic will fill, pack, cool, and warp in the mold before any steel is cut. It identifies potential problems such as:

  • Short shots: Incomplete filling of the cavity.
  • Weld lines: Weak points where flow fronts meet.
  • Air traps: Trapped gases causing defects.
  • Warpage: Part distortion during cooling.

This analysis minimizes costly mold revisions, reduces trial-and-error, optimizes gate placement and cooling, and accelerates time-to-market by 20–40%.

10. Can plastic molds be repaired or modified?

Yes. Common repairs and modifications include:

  • Parting line repair: Re-machining worn or damaged parting surfaces.
  • Cavity welding and polishing: Filling scratches, dents, or worn areas.
  • Ejector pin replacement: Replacing worn or broken ejection components.
  • Adding material: Welding steel to reduce dimensions or fix errors.
  • Removing material: Machining to increase part size or add features.

Minor modifications cost $500–$3,000. Major changes such as adding cavities or redesigning features can cost $5,000–$25,000 and may take 2–6 weeks.

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Further Reading: Injection Mold Cost & Pricing Guide

Interested in learning more about the cost and pricing of injection molds? Explore our comprehensive resources below, including cost calculators, expert tips, and practical advice to help you manage your mold investment wisely.

For more industry insights and helpful tools, visit our blog.

steven cheng
steven cheng

Steven Cheng, fondateur de Topworks, est un expert de l'industrie du moulage par injection de plastique et de la conception de moules de précision. Fort d'une carrière de plus de 20 ans, il fournit des guides DFM et des solutions d'ingénierie faisant autorité pour le secteur de la fabrication des matières plastiques. Son expertise couvre l'ensemble du cycle de production des moules, de la sélection des matériaux à l'optimisation des pièces finales, ce qui fait de lui une source privilégiée d'informations techniques sur la fabrication.

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