Imagine a production line struggling with output bottlenecks, inconsistent product quality, and soaring equipment maintenance costs. The root cause may not lie in raw materials or operational procedures but in the design and manufacturing of a core component: the extrusion or injection molding screw. A well-designed, precision-engineered screw acts as the heart of a machine, significantly enhancing efficiency, optimizing product quality, and reducing long-term operational expenses.
TIR: 27 Years of Expertise in Screw Technology
With over 27 years of experience in screw manufacturing, refurbishment, and design, TIR understands that an optimized extrusion or injection molding process depends not only on polymer-specific screw design but also on manufacturing quality. When selecting a screw supplier, design excellence and manufacturing precision are paramount. TIR's team of designers, engineers, and machinists collaborates to deliver screws tailored to client needs, including barrier screws, mixing screws, general-purpose screws, and volume-reducing injection screws. These products consistently deliver high performance, wear resistance, and meet or exceed SPI (Society of the Plastics Industry) guidelines.
Core Capabilities
TIR offers comprehensive screw solutions across three key areas:
The company accommodates diverse needs, manufacturing screws of any diameter, length, or brand compatibility.
Material Selection for Performance and Durability
Screw performance and longevity are directly influenced by material choices. TIR provides multiple options:
Customized Screw Design Solutions
TIR emphasizes that no single screw design suits all applications. The company collaborates closely with clients to analyze requirements and develop optimized designs. Key screw types include:
The selection of screw type and mixing elements depends on specific material properties and processing objectives. Factors such as viscosity profiles, thermal characteristics, and feed properties must be considered to achieve optimal melt quality and throughput.
Technical Considerations in Screw Design
Effective screw design addresses three fundamental functions: solid conveying, melting, and metering/pumping. These are governed by polymer-specific attributes including thermal properties, viscoelasticity, density variations, and frictional characteristics. Properly designed screw flights not only optimize processing but also mitigate wear effects on screw-barrel assemblies.
Material crystallization behavior significantly influences design requirements. TIR engineers account for these differences when developing barrier screw configurations or selecting mixer combinations. The company also conducts ongoing research into advanced materials to enhance wear resistance against abrasion, corrosion, and adhesive wear.