Blow molder comes to Pennzoil's 'Rescue' (sidebar 2)

The art and the angles

In blow molding, freshly molded Rescue containers are transferred to a trim station where flash is removed and gas is vacuumed o
In blow molding, freshly molded Rescue containers are transferred to a trim station where flash is removed and gas is vacuumed o

Once Airopak and Marpac had signed on with Pennzoil, the real fun began.

First, the angles that Pennzoil desired to make the container look like a gas pump nozzle were more severe than had ever been executed in blow molding. “We’d only done one other angled neck bottle with fluorination before,” reports Ken Kallish, vice president and general manager of Airopak and Marpac. “About six months before this project, we produced a bottle with an 11-degree neck angle, and we really thought we had achieved something. And this is the first time at Airopak that we’ve blown a bottle without a calibrated neck.” Neck rings at the top of the blow mold produce the calibrated neck. The Rescue bottle couldn’t be done that way.

Although the neck angle was originally 60°, it was modified to 53° to accommodate the special molds. “The angle of the neck had to be changed so the bottle molds would fit into the blow molding machine,” says Ed Campbell. “The blow pins are fixed within certain measurements, and these molds take up every centimeter of the platen.”

The aluminum blow molds with beryllium inserts were made by Heise Industries (East Berlin, CT), which Campbell calls a Class A mold shop. He also credits Airopak’s Lee Mount, vice president of molding technology, with developing a head tooling and process package that would permit the same parison to mold what essentially becomes two different bottles. Because of the neck angle and tilted molds and blow pins, the molds on each side of the machine face in different directions.

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