HomeBlogHow-to & TutorialsMust-Read for Mold Design How to Calculate Shrinkage and Draft Angles

Must-Read for Mold Design How to Calculate Shrinkage and Draft Angles

I. The Nature of Shrinkage: Plastic’s “Thermal Expansion & Contraction”
Plastic cools from a molten state (>200°C)to room temperature, inevitably shrinking. The mold cavity must be “Scaled Up.”
Core Formula:
Shrink Compensation=Nominal Part Dimension×Shrinkage Rate
Critical Note:​ This is not simple multiplication. Plastic shrink occurs in two phases:
Thermal Shrinkage:​ Occurs during cooling (primary factor).
Orientation Shrinkage:​ Caused by molecular alignment during flow, leading to warpage.

II. Practical Calculation: How to Determine the “Exact” Shrinkage Rate?
Do not blindly trust the “Standard Range” from suppliers (e.g., ABS: 0.4%-0.7%). You need empirical correction.
1. Get the Initial Value (Material Data sheet)
Look for “Mold Shrinkage”​ or “Linear Shrinkage”​ in the material spec sheet.
Amorphous Plastics (PC, ABS, PS):​ Stable shrink rate, low anisotropy. (e.g., ABS ≈ 0.5%, PC ≈ 0.5%-0.7%).
Crystalline Plastics (PP, PE, PA, POM):​ High and volatile shrink rate, high anisotropy. (e.g., PP ≈ 1.0%-2.5%, PA66 ≈ 1.2%-1.8%).
2. Wall Thickness Correction (Critical!)
Rule:​ Thicker walls = Larger shrink age.
Thin Walls (<1.5mm):​ Use the lower limit of the shrink range (e.g., PA66 use 1.2%).
Thick Walls (>3mm):​ Use the upper limitof the shrink range (e.g., PA66 use 1.8%), or higher.
Rule of Thumb:​ Increase shrink rate by 0.1%-0.2%​ for every 1mm increase in wall thickness.
3. Flow Direction Correction (Anisotropy)
For crystalline materials, Flow Direction (MD) shrink > Transverse Direction (TD) shrink.
Simple Parts:​ Use the average value.
Precision Parts / Long Features:
Example:For a PP part, MD shrink is 1.8%, TD shrink is 1.2%.
Mold Design:Scale the length (flow direction)​ by 1.8% and the width​ by 1.2%.
4. Formula Application Example
Let’s make a 100mm long PC strip​ (Wall thickness: 2mm).
PC shrink range: 0.5%-0.7%.
Medium thickness (2mm), take the mid-point: 0.6%.
Mold Cavity Length​ = 100mm × (1 + 0.6%) = 100.6mm.

III. Draft Angle Design: Ensuring a “Clean Birth”
If a sidewall is perpendicular to the opening direction (0° draft), the product will be “Choked”​ by the mold, causing silver streaks, scratches, or ejection failure.
1. Minimum Draft Angle Formula (Rule of Thumb)
While there is no absolute formula, industry follows:
“Require 0.5°-2°of draft angle per 1 inch (25.4mm) of depth.”

Quick Reference Table:

Part Depth (Height) Recommended Min. Draft (Per Side) Offset per 25mm depth
< 20mm (Small) 0.5° – 1°​ 0.2mm – 0.4mm
20mm – 50mm (Medium) 1° – 1.5°​ 0.4mm – 0.7mm
> 50mm (Deep Cavity) 1.5° – 3°​ 0.7mm – 1.3mm

2. 3 Major Factors Affecting Draft Angle
Material Hardness:
Soft/Rubbery (TPU, TPE):​ High friction, requires larger draft (2°-5°).
Rigid (ABS, PC):​ Good stiffness, allows smaller draft (0.5°-1.5°).
Texture Depth (Critical!):
If the surface requires Texturing (VDI 3400 Standard)​ or Etching:
VDI 20 (Fine) → Add 0.15mm​ draft offset per 25mm depth.
VDI 30 (Medium) → Add 0.25mm​ draft offset per 25mm depth.
VDI 40 (Coarse) → Add 0.4mm​ draft offset per 25mm depth.
Calculation:For a 50mm deep part with VDI 30 texture, add 0.5mm offset per side ≈ 1°​ extra draft.
Precision Requirements:
For precision mating surfaces (e.g., flanges, snap fits) where draft is limited, consider “Delayed Ejection”​ or “Forced Ejection”​ (only for PE/PP).

IV. Conflict Resolution: Shrinkage vs. Draft
1. Problem: Ribs/Bosses – Sink Marks & Sticking
Symptom:​ Ribs are thick (prone to sink) and deep (hard to eject).
Solution:
Rib Thickness:​ Limit rib thickness ≤ 70%of adjacent wall thickness (Fundamental fix for sink).
Rib Draft:​ Use double the draft angle of the outer wall (e.g., if wall is 1°, rib is 2°-3°).
Root Radius:​ Apply R-angle to prevent stress concentration and improve release.
2. Problem: Clear Parts (PC, PMMA) – Stress Whitening
Symptom:​ Small draft angles cause ejection stress, turning edges white.
Solution:
Ensure draft ≥ 1.5°.
Polish mold surfaces to Ra < 0.05μmto reduce friction.

Conclusion: DFM Checklist
Before sending the 3D modelto the mold maker, verify:
Shrinkage Rate:​ Have you set a specific value​ (not a range) based on material, thickness, and flow direction?
Draft Angles:​ Do all vertical walls have ≥ 0.5°​ draft?
Texture Compensation:​ If textured, has the draft angle been increased accordingly?
Ribs:​ Are ribs thinner than 70% wall thickness with sufficient draft?

If you have a 3D model under design, send itto us. Our engineering team will provide a free DFM report including precise shrink compensation values, draft angle optimization, and warp risk analysis.