Living hinge

Living hinge

A living hinge is a thin flexible hinge (flexure bearing) made from plastic (rather than cloth, leather, or some other substance) that joins two rigid plastic parts together, allowing them to bend along the line of the hinge. It is typically manufactured in an injection molding operation that creates all three parts at one time "as a single part", and if correctly designed and constructed, it can remain functional over the life of the part. Polyethylene and polypropylene are considered to be the best resins for living hinges, due to their excellent fatigue resistance. [ [http://www.protomold.com/Design_Tips/UnitedStates/2007/2007-05_designtips/default.htm Protomold 2007-05_designtips] ] [ [http://www.idfuel.com/index.php?blog=2&p=502&more=1&c=1 Hinges, both living and dead] ]

A thinned section of the plastic bends to allow movement. The minimal friction and very little wear in such a hinge makes it useful in the design of microelectromechanical systems, and the low cost and ease of manufacturing makes them quite common in disposable packaging. These can flex more than a million cycles without failure. [ [http://www.efunda.com/designstandards/plastic_design/hinge.cfm Engineering Fundamentals] Living Hinge]

History

A few years after the introduction of polypropylene (PP) in 1957, "engineers at Enjay (now ExxonMobil) noticed an unusual phenomenon while studying pigment dispersion in very thin-walled color chips. Below a certain thickness, the PP molecules oriented in the direction of flow. Bending perpendicular to this orientation resulted in a stronger part that did not break with repeated flexing. Bob Munns, who worked at Enjay at the time, coined the term "living hinge" and the name stuck. The living hinge was introduced to the industry as a hinged recipe box at the 1963 NPE. Over the next 40 years, creative design engineers used living hinges in thousands of applications ranging from dispensing closures with hinged caps to automobile gas pedals and carrying cases. The current trend for parts consolidation and assembly minimization has created a renewed interest in integrally molded hinges." [ [http://www.immnet.com/articles?article=1951] article "By Design: Polypropylene part design, Part 2-Living hinges" By: Glenn Beall - August 2002]

ources and notes

Further reading

*http://www.rtpcompany.com/info/molding/design/hinge.htm


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