The development of moulds in the future mainly includes the following directions:
1. High precision
Whether the dimensional accuracy can be achieved. Japan and Germany used to do the best. With decades of continuous learning and innovation, a large number of companies specializing in high-precision mold manufacturing have emerged in China's mold industry. To make high-precision molds, there are two main elements, one is equipment, the other is talent.
2. Mold standardization
With the popularization of various automatic equipment for mold production and the improvement of the intellectualization of the internal standard parts of the mold, the efficiency of rapid screening mold production is getting higher and higher, and will develop towards a higher and better realm. In this process, the requirements for mold designers will be higher and higher. At that time, mold designers can not only understand the automation equipment, but also participate in the design. In the future when the degree of mechanization is highly developed, the term general labor may also disappear. In the future, there are only three kinds of people in factories: managers, technicians and robots.



3. New molds continue to progress with technological innovation
Many molds that used to be very complicated and tortuous can become very simple. There are also many structures that were originally considered impossible. These are new opportunities and challenges for the mold industry. Specifically, they are opportunities and challenges for mold designers. Mold factories that master these new mold design and manufacturing technologies will have more initiatives. Mold is always an industry that depends on technology and quality!
4. The integration of product development and mold is also a trend
This change is a change that can affect the manufacturing mode more than the replacement of the omnipotent mold master by the assembly line. Simply put, it means that mold design and product research and development are integrated into a new position, which can be responsible for the whole product from appearance to organization, and then to mold.
