Definition
Continuous recirculation is the practice of continuously feeding reclaimed material back into the production stream — reintroducing in-house Scrap (and sometimes recycled content) into the feed so resources are used to the fullest and waste is minimized. It is the circular-economy principle that the Regrinding Cycle puts into practice on the molding floor.
How it works in a molding cell
- In-house loop: runners, sprues and rejected parts are ground into Regrind and metered straight back into Virgin Resin at a controlled ratio, shot after shot — the Regrinding Cycle.
- Closed-loop, near real time: with beside-the-press granulating, the reclaimed flakes return to the same machine's feed continuously, not in separate batches.
- Steady-state balance: the recycled fraction settles to an equilibrium set by how much scrap each shot makes versus the dosing ratio.
Why it matters
- Resource efficiency & cost: less virgin resin bought and less waste hauled away for the same number of good parts.
- Lower Carbon Footprint: keeping carbon circulating in the process beats landfill/incineration plus new fossil feedstock.
- Lean & sustainability: continuous recirculation is a pillar of Lean Manufacturing (eliminating material waste) and of a plant's sustainability goals.
The control caveat
Recirculation must be managed, not unlimited: every pass adds a Regrind Generation of heat history that degrades the polymer, so molders cap the blend ratio, limit generations and cascade higher-generation material to lower-spec parts. Where properties or regulations forbid recyclate, the loop runs on pure Virgin Resin and chemical recycling (Depolymerization) becomes the circular route instead.
Related terms
What is continuous recirculation in injection molding?
Continuously feeding reclaimed in-house material (regrind) back into the production stream at a controlled ratio so resources are maximized and waste minimized — the circular-economy principle behind the regrinding cycle.
How is continuous recirculation different from the regrinding cycle?
Continuous recirculation is the broad principle of always feeding reclaimed material back into production; the regrinding cycle is the concrete closed loop — grind scrap, blend with virgin, re-mold — that carries it out on the floor.
What limits continuous recirculation?
Polymer degradation: each reprocessing pass adds a regrind generation that lowers properties, so the blend ratio and number of generations are capped, and regulated or high-spec parts may require virgin resin or chemical recycling instead.