injection mold reciprocating screws for 3D suction blow molding

application insights

3D Suction Blow Molding

WHAT IS STRETCH BLOW MOLDING

Did You Know?

3D suction blow molding shapes complex, curved hollow parts—especially automotive air/charge‑air ducts and filler pipes—by first closing the mold, then drawing a molten parison through the 3D cavity with vacuum (often with support air to prevent collapse), followed by blowing and cooling to final geometry. This approach enables long, branched parts with reduced flash/scrap versus conventional routes.

At-A-Glance Facts:

  • Also called: parison suction blow molding; 3D extrusion blow molding
  • Typical where: automotive HVAC/engine air ducts, charge‑air/turbo pipes, filler necks; also some appliance and tubing parts
  • Key machine elements: extruder + continuous or accumulator head, vacuum device/channels, support‑air and blow air, 3D mold with vents, pinch‑off/deflash
  • Process options: Mono‑material or sequential multi‑material (dual‑resin) runs for localized properties

How It Works (typical sequence)

1. Mold closes to define the 3D path

2. A parison is extruded and sucked through the cavity using a vacuum device; support air inside the parison prevents collapse and helps guidance

3. Ends are pinched; blow air expands the parison against cavity walls; cooling fixes shape; ends are trimmed/deflashed

4. The suction phase positions the parison so much of the material lies within the cavity before inflation—reducing waste for long, narrow 3D parts compared with conventional EBM approaches

Typical Defects (and where they come from)

  • Wall thinning at tight bends or near vacuum ports (positioning/flow related)
  • Incomplete placement or wrinkling if suction/support‑air balance is off
  • Seam/pinch‑off weaknesses if edge geometry or cooling are inadequate (visible as leaks at ends). (General to blow molding; mitigated by edge maintenance and cooling balance.)

Common metal/tooling challenges

Pinch‑off lands / knives: repeated hot parison contact → edge wear & galling

3D cavity surfaces near ports: abrasion with filled PA/PP; risk of vacuum‑port clogging

Die lips / mandrels: erosion/abrasion at high throughputs

Screw & barrel (upstream): abrasive/corrosive wear when running glass‑/mineral‑filled formulations

Surface Engineering Options

Siloed by what you’re seeing on the tool (symptoms) so you can choose the right surface solution.

Start with the question: did the metal fail, or is it failing?


In 3D suction blow molding, common symptoms like surface scuffing, sticking on suction/mandrel interfaces, wear on critical perimeters, and finish defects tied to heat or contamination are the bridge between performance issues and root cause.

Metal failures we target

  • Sliding wear / scuffing on suction surfaces
  • Galling in high-contact zones
  • Edge wear / geometry loss on sealing features
  • Corrosion / pitting (materials & resin chemistry dependent)

Performance failures we target

  • Sticking / material pickup that disrupts cycles
  • Surface finish defects (scuff, haze, marks)
  • Short maintenance intervals / frequent cleaning
  • Thermal-related quality issues (hot spots, seams)

Important: “Armoloy-available treatments” are what we provide. “Other industry options” are common alternatives that may be supplied by other providers.

What you’re seeing (symptoms) Likely failure mode Armoloy-available treatments Other industry options (not offered by Armoloy) Benefit focus
Sticking or material pickup on suction tips, mandrel surfaces, or contact zones; inconsistent release Friction + adhesion (material pickup) driven by surface roughness and chemistry Electroless Nickel + PTFE (EN-PTFE) (where specified)


Reduces adhesion and friction that drive sticking and buildup.
High-Phos Electroless Nickel (ENP) (where specified)


Uniform barrier coverage where corrosion resistance and thickness control matter.

DLC (PVD/PACVD)


Low-friction thin films supplied by external providers to reduce adhesion.

Performance failures

Sticking, cycle stability

Scuffing / sliding wear on mandrel edges, suction lips, or high-contact interfaces Adhesive + sliding wear; often tied to high contact and cyclical motion Thin Dense Chrome (TDC)


Thin uniform hard surface to help mitigate wear while preserving critical dimensions.
Surface engineering consult


We’ll validate hardness, friction behavior, and dimensional build for the specific contact interface.

CrN (PVD)


Hard, thin films used by external coating providers to add galling/anti-wear benefits.

Metal + performance

Wear mitigation / longer tool life

Edge wear on sealing lips, perimeters, or geometry that affects part definition Abrasive wear and geometry loss on sharp/high-contact edges Thin Dense Chrome (TDC)


Hard, thin protection to help retain critical geometry where tolerance is sensitive.

Hard PVD films (e.g., CrN variants)


Common when an external provider is selected for edge protection.

Metal failures

Wear mitigation / geometry retention

Corrosion marks, staining, or haze after cleaning/washdown; surfaces that trap contaminants Corrosion initiation + roughness/buildup sites; chemistry and moisture accelerate attack Electropolish + passivation (where applicable)


Surface smoothing and corrosion-resistance restoration to reduce buildup sites and improve cleanliness.

ASTM A967 passivation (industry standard process)


Commonly specified for stainless corrosion performance improvements (performed by qualified providers).

Metal + performance

Corrosion control & cleanliness

Thermal instability, hot spots, finish defects tied to temperature imbalance Thermal management limitation (heat extraction and stability), not always solved by a coating alone Surface engineering consult


We help confirm where surface treatment helps, where it should be avoided, and how to protect critical areas without compromising heat transfer.

High-conductivity copper alloys (e.g., MoldMAX® / AMPCOLOY®)


Common substrate/insert solution to improve heat extraction in hot zones.

Performance failures

Quality stability / defect control

How to use this section: Tell us the symptom, where it shows up (suction tips, mandrel surfaces, sealing/perimeter features), the resin/additives, and your dimensional constraints. We’ll validate the best Armoloy-available treatment—or point you to a proven industry alternative when that’s the better engineering call.

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