mold trial t1 t2 t3

Injection Mold Trial Process: T1, T2, T3 and First Article Inspection Guide

BuildMold precision mold manufacturing

📌 Key Takeaways

  • T1 (first trial shot) is not expected to produce production-quality parts — its purpose is to validate mold function and identify issues, not achieve final part dimensions
  • The most valuable data from T1 comes from systematic parameter variation, not from running the mold at nominal settings — establish the process window boundaries at T1
  • Short shots are more useful than flashed parts at T1 — a short shot shows the fill pattern and reveals air trap locations; a flashed part just shows clamping is insufficient
  • Every T1 modification should be documented with before/after photographs and dimensional measurements — a mold trial without documentation is engineering knowledge lost
  • T2 acceptance criteria should be agreed in writing before T1 begins — ambiguous acceptance criteria are the leading cause of mold trial disputes between customer and supplier

The injection mold trial process — from T1 first shot through T3 production validation — is where mold engineering theory meets manufacturing reality. Even a perfectly designed and precisely machined mold requires systematic trialing to establish the production process window, identify and resolve any remaining design or machining issues, and generate the dimensional evidence needed for customer acceptance. This guide covers the complete mold trial process, from pre-trial preparation through final approval.


1. Pre-Trial Preparation

A successful mold trial begins before the first shot. Thorough pre-trial preparation prevents common trial failures and ensures the trial time is spent optimizing, not troubleshooting basic setup issues:

  • Mold inspection checklist — Verify all cooling connections are made and pressure-tested. Confirm ejector pins retract fully. Check guide pin and bushing fit. Verify all inserts are seated correctly. Inspect vents for correct depth and cleanliness
  • Machine selection — Select injection machine with clamping force 1.2× calculated requirement. Verify shot size is 20–80% of machine capacity. Confirm machine has adequate injection speed and pressure capability
  • Material preparation — Dry material per supplier specification. Use production-grade resin from the correct lot. Document material lot number and drying parameters for the trial record
  • Baseline parameters — Set starting parameters from material data sheet: melt temperature, mold temperature, injection speed (conservative), cooling time (generous). Do not optimize before seeing first shots
  • Measurement plan — Prepare measurement plan specifying which dimensions to measure on T1 parts, in what sequence, using which gauges. Pre-mark cavities to track cavity-to-cavity variation

2. T1 — First Trial Objectives & Protocol

T1 is a diagnostic trial, not a production run. The objectives are specific and limited:

T1 ObjectiveMethodAcceptable Outcome
Confirm mold opens and closes without interferenceSlow-speed dry cycling before injectionSmooth operation; no binding or damage
Confirm ejector system functionsEject parts at conservative settingsParts release; no sticking or breakage
Confirm cooling system functionsMonitor inlet/outlet temperature deltaDelta <5°C; no leaks
Identify gross filling defectsShort shots at 30%, 60%, 90% fillFill pattern visible; air traps identified
Achieve complete fillIncrease injection speed/pressure to full fillParts complete; note any flash or burn marks
Preliminary dimensional checkMeasure 5 critical dimensions on 3 partsDocument deviation from nominal; no acceptance at T1

At T1, do not attempt to optimize. The goal is to understand what the mold is doing, not to make it perfect. Take photographs of every defect. Measure parts even if they look wrong. Document every parameter setting used.


3. T1 Defect Analysis & Modifications

After T1, a systematic defect analysis determines what modifications are needed before T2. Common T1 findings and their solutions:

DefectRoot Cause DiagnosisModification
Short shot at flow endInsufficient venting; flow too slowAdd vents at short-shot location; increase injection speed
Flash on parting surfaceParting surface damage or insufficient clampStone parting surface; recalculate clamp tonnage
Burn marksTrapped air — vent blocked or missingClean existing vents; add vents at burn location
Sink marksInsufficient pack; thick wall sectionIncrease pack pressure/time; evaluate wall thickness
Sticking in cavityInsufficient draft; rough surface; no air assistAdd draft if possible; polish cavity; add air assist
Dimensional oversizeCavity too large; insufficient shrinkageSteel-safe — re-machine to remove stock
Dimensional undersizeCavity too small; excessive shrinkageWeld and re-machine; evaluate material shrinkage rate
Weld lines on cosmetic surfaceGate location creating front merger at visible areaRelocate gate; add overflow well; increase mold temp

4. T2 — Process Optimization & Dimensional Validation

T2 begins after T1 modifications are complete and verified. The T2 objective is to establish the optimized process window and achieve dimensional compliance on critical features:

  • Design of Experiments (DOE) — Systematically vary injection speed, pack pressure, mold temperature, and cooling time to establish the proven acceptable range (PAR) of each parameter
  • Process window validation — Confirm that parts remain within specification across the edges of the process window. A robust process window means small parameter variations do not cause rejections
  • Cavity-to-cavity measurement — For multi-cavity molds, measure 5 parts from each cavity. Maximum acceptable cavity-to-cavity variation: 0.02mm on critical dimensions
  • Cosmetic evaluation — Evaluate sink marks, weld lines, gate vestige, and surface finish under agreed lighting conditions (typically D65 illuminant at 500 lux, 45° angle)
  • T2 dimensional report — Full measurement of all drawing dimensions on 5 parts per cavity. Report deviations and confirm which dimensions are in tolerance

5. T3 / FAI — Production Validation & Customer Approval

T3 (or First Article Inspection) is the final validation trial, run at the established T2 process parameters to generate the formal acceptance documentation:

  • Production run simulation — Run minimum 100 consecutive shots at T2 process settings. Evaluate part consistency, cycle stability, and any process drift
  • CMM First Article Inspection — Full 100% dimensional inspection of all drawing dimensions on 5 parts per cavity using calibrated CMM. Results reported against nominal and tolerance
  • Visual inspection — 100% visual inspection of trial parts against agreed cosmetic acceptance criteria. Parts graded A (accept), B (review), C (reject)
  • Gate vestige measurement — Gate mark height and position documented and confirmed within drawing specification
  • T3 documentation package — CMM report, process parameter record, material certificate, 10 sample parts (labeled with cavity number and date), mold trial summary report

Mold acceptance should be based on objective, documented evidence — not visual impression. At BuildMold, every mold trial generates a full trial report with photographs, parameter records, dimensional data, and clearly stated acceptance/rejection status for each drawing requirement. This documentation protects both the mold maker and the customer, and provides the baseline record needed for future production troubleshooting.

Starting a New Mold Project?

BuildMold conducts T1–T3 mold trials on-site with full documentation, CMM FAI reports, and sample parts included with every mold. Contact us to discuss your project.

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