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Barrel Length

Also known as: barrel length · comprimento do cilindro · l/d ratio · longitud de barril · zylinderlänge · 料筒长度 · 长径比

Machinery

Definition

Barrel length is the working (heated) length of the injection Barrel, from the feed throat to the front. On its own it sets plasticizing capacity, but it matters most as part of a ratio with the Barrel Diameter.

L/D ratio

Divide the barrel length by the Barrel Diameter and you get the L/D ratio (length-to-diameter), the single most useful number for the injection unit:

  • Typical range: ~18:1 to 24:1 (general-purpose presses cluster near 20:1).
  • Longer L/D (22–26:1): more turns of the Screw to melt and homogenize — better mixing and melt quality, higher capacity, but more shear and Residence Time.
  • Shorter L/D (16–18:1): gentler on shear-sensitive resins and shorter residence, but less melting and mixing capacity.

Why it matters

A barrel that is too short for the job under-melts and gives poor homogeneity; one that is too long for a small shot over-residences the resin and degrades it (tie-in with Barrel Occupancy and Residence Time). Length is fixed for a given machine, so it is mainly a machine-selection lever, not a process knob.

Related terms

What is barrel length in injection molding?

It is the heated working length of the barrel; divided by the barrel diameter it gives the L/D ratio that governs melting and mixing.

What is a typical L/D ratio?

Most injection barrels run about 18:1 to 24:1, with 20:1 a common general-purpose value.

Does a longer barrel melt better?

A longer L/D gives more melting and mixing capacity and better homogeneity, but it adds shear and residence time — so very long barrels are not ideal for small shots or heat-sensitive resins.

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Related terms