A sink mark is a local depression on the surface of a plastic injection molded part, typically found in a thicker area of a component. Sink marks can originate from processing methods, tooling design, part geometry, and material selection.
There are varying standards regarding whether sink marks can be present on plastic injection molded components, depending on the product and its end use. For example, parts for consumer electronics must be nearly free of sink marks, while toys often have visible sink marks on their surfaces.
In plastic injection molding, a plastic resin material is melted and then injected into a mold, where it cools and solidifies into the final part or parts before being ejected. Sink marks can occur when there is a part thickness that is too large for the type of resin being injected into the mold. They are typically found in thicker areas due to varying cooling rates across the part or insufficient cooling while the part is in the mold. Sink marks can also be caused by low pressure in the mold cavity or an excessive temperature at the gate through which material is injected into the mold.
Here are some of the most common changes that can be made to resolve plastic injection molding sink marks:
Injection molding contract manufacturers (CM) use design for manufacturability to prevent sink marks during the design phase, which is the least expensive time to address them. The CM engineers use specialized mold flow simulation software to simulate the injection molding processes, creating 3D simulations of flow, heat flux, and warpage for injection molding, including the complete mold with all details. During the simulation, they inspect the project for sink marks and other problems using a checklist for DFM in plastic injection molding. They make changes to the design and plans for the mold, materials, etc., rerunning the simulation and revising until sink marks and other problems are eliminated.