Preventive mold maintenance in injection molding: a practical maintenance schedule
Preventive maintenance in injection molding is always cheaper than reactive intervention. Yet most molding facilities still work with a reactive schedule: clean when splay marks, burn marks or gas fouling become visible in the product. At that point the damage is already done and cleaning costs considerably more time than early intervention would have.
This article provides a practical maintenance schedule for mold cleaning with dry ice blasting. You will learn how mold contamination builds up across four phases, which cleaning interval is optimal per mold type, and how to build signal recognition into your production process. ColdBlast advises injection molders based on this schedule about the right Cold Jet machine configuration and training setup.

How mold contamination determines service life
Mold service life is almost always expressed by production companies in number of shots. What is less visible is that actual service life is strongly influenced by how consistently a mold is cleaned. Plate-out builds up in vents and cavities and causes thermal stress at every injection. Gas fouling leaves corrosive deposits that attack the steel surface. Release agent residue polymerises under repeated heat and becomes a hard layer that alters cavity dimensions.
ColdBlast sees at injection molders switching to a preventive schedule that mold service life increases by twenty to thirty percent. Not because the mold improves through cleaning, but because degradation mechanisms are interrupted before they cause cumulative damage.
The four phases of mold contamination
| Phase | Visible signals | Production impact | Cleaning time |
|---|---|---|---|
| Phase 1: Initial | No visible deposit; microscopic plate-out begins | No impact | 15-25 min in-press |
| Phase 2: Build-up | Light deposit in vents; light gas fouling | Minor cycle variation | 25-45 min in-press |
| Phase 3: Visible | Splay marks or burn marks in product; vents blocked | Rejects; lower first-pass yield | 1-3 hours in-press or out-of-press |
| Phase 4: Critical | Serious corrosion damage; cavity deviations | Mold out of production; repair required | 3-8 hours out-of-press; possible repair cost |
Preventive cleaning in phase 1 or 2 costs a fraction of the time phase 3 or 4 requires. ColdBlast recommends a schedule based on shot count, not visible deposit. Once you clean on visible signals you are already past phase 2.
Cleaning schedule per mold type
| Mold type | Preventive interval | Signal for extra session | Recommended machine |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard single-cavity, engineering plastic | Every 5,000-10,000 shots | First light deposit in vents | PCS Ultra, fine setting |
| Multi-cavity, high volume | Every 3,000-5,000 shots | Cycle variation above ±3% | PCS Ultra or Aero 40FP |
| Rubber mold, vulcanisation | After every production run | Release agent residue directly after use | PCS Ultra, variable pellet |
| Blow mold, HDPE/PP | Every 8,000-15,000 shots | Light deposit at parting lines | i³ MicroClean 2 or Aero 40FP |
| Thermoforming mold | Daily at continuous use | Visible build-up after every shift | i³ MicroClean 2 |
| Die-cast mold, aluminium alloy | Every 1,000-2,000 shots | Heat cracks or oxide deposit | Aero 80FP, medium pellet |
Signal recognition on the shop floor
A preventive schedule only works if operators know when to clean outside the schedule. ColdBlast trains operators on six signals that indicate accelerated contamination and justify an extra cleaning session.
| Signal | Meaning | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Splay marks in product | Gas fouling in vents or gate area | In-press cleaning, focus on vents |
| Burn marks in product | Dieseling from blocked vents | In-press vent cleaning, lower pressure |
| Higher injection pressure needed | Plate-out increasing resistance in cavity | In-press cleaning of cavity wall |
| Longer cycle time | Reduced heat transfer from deposit | In-press cleaning of cooling channels and surface |
| Rejects above threshold | Phase 3 reached; immediate cleaning | In-press or out-of-press depending on severity |
| Visible deposit at mold opening | Phase 2-3 transition | Use next planned stop for cleaning |
Logging and record keeping
A preventive schedule without logging is not a schedule; it is an intention. ColdBlast recommends a simple log per mold with four fields per cleaning session. Date and shift. Shot counter at start of cleaning. Cleaning duration and machine configuration. Observed contamination level on a scale of one to four (matching the phase breakdown above).
This log serves two functions. It shows your auditor a documented preventive maintenance programme for your quality system. And it enables pattern recognition: if mold X consistently reaches phase 2 earlier than the norm, that points to a material or process parameter that needs adjustment.
Build your maintenance schedule
Want a preventive mold maintenance schedule that fits your mold portfolio? ColdBlast works with you to build a schedule based on your mold types, production volumes and current cleaning regime. Including machine advice and operator training.
Request schedule advice →Want to calculate the OEE gain from preventive maintenance first? Read our article on improving OEE in injection molding or calculate your saving directly in our ROI calculator.
Frequently asked questions
How often should I clean an injection mold?
That depends on mold type, material processed and production intensity. ColdBlast applies a rule of thumb of 5,000 to 10,000 shots for standard single-cavity molds with engineering plastic. Rubber molds require cleaning after every production run. ColdBlast establishes the optimal interval per mold based on your production data.
What is the difference between preventive and reactive mold maintenance?
Preventive maintenance cleans based on a predetermined interval or early signals, before contamination affects production. Reactive maintenance responds to visible production defects or mold damage. Reactive maintenance costs three to five times more time per session on average and risks cumulative mold damage that preventive maintenance would have avoided.
How do I integrate mold cleaning into my shift planning?
ColdBlast recommends coupling cleaning sessions to existing press stops for mold changes or planned maintenance moments. In-press cleaning takes twenty to forty minutes; that fits within most mold change windows without creating extra downtime. The cleaning session becomes part of the change routine, not a separate stoppage.
How much longer does a mold last with preventive maintenance?
ColdBlast sees at injection molders switching to a preventive cleaning schedule a service life increase of twenty to thirty percent. This varies considerably by material and process parameters; aggressive materials such as glass-fibre reinforced plastics or corrosive additives justify more aggressive schedules and yield the greatest service life gain.
Which Cold Jet machine configuration fits a preventive schedule?
For preventive maintenance at phase 1-2 level a Cold Jet PCS Ultra with fine pellet setting is the most versatile choice; the adjustable pellet size switches quickly between mold types. For dedicated preventive cleaning on one mold type an i³ MicroClean 2 sometimes suffices. ColdBlast advises the configuration after reviewing your mold portfolio.
How do I train operators on signal recognition?
ColdBlast provides operator training that combines signal recognition with practical cleaning technique. Training takes half a day and is given on your own production line with your own molds. Operators learn to recognise the six signals, set the correct machine configuration and record the cleaning session in the log.
Is preventive mold maintenance documentable for ISO 9001?
Yes. ISO 9001 requires a documented preventive maintenance plan for production equipment. ColdBlast supplies a template maintenance plan per mold that aligns with the structure of your ISO 9001 management system. The log format is compatible with common MES and ERP systems.
