The electronics industry demands exceptionally high precision, consistent quality, and specialized material properties from injection molded components. From tiny connectors with 0.4mm pitch terminals to large TV bezels requiring Class A surfaces, molded electronic components require advanced mold design and process control.
Electronic connectors require tight tolerances (±0.02-0.05mm), high-temperature materials for soldering (LCP, PPS, PA9T), and insert molding for metal terminals. Key challenges: maintaining terminal position accuracy, preventing flash on contact surfaces, and minimizing warpage in long thin parts. High-cavitation molds (16-64 cavities) are common for production efficiency.
These components transport semiconductor devices through assembly and testing. Requirements: exact pocket dimensions, static dissipative properties (10^6-10^12 Ω/sq surface resistance), flatness within 0.1mm, and low contamination. Materials include conductive PET, PC, and PS compounds. Tray molds often have 4-8 cavities with complex ejector systems for thin-wall carrier tapes.
LED housings, lenses, and reflectors require high reflectivity, thermal management, and optical precision. Materials: white heat-resistant PC for housings, PMMA or PC for lenses, aluminum-filled PPA for heat sinks. Optical surfaces require SPI A-1 polish and careful gate placement to avoid flow marks.