General Plastics Manufacturing Co. Exhibits Latest Advancements in Last-a-Foam High-Temperature Tooling Board Foam and Composite Core Products

 

 

           General Plastics Manufacturing Co. (Tacoma, Wash., U.S.), a provider and manufacturer of rigid and flexible polyurethane foam sheet stock, built-to-print composite assemblies and finished custom parts, is exhibiting the latest advancements to its Last-a-Foam high-temperature tooling board foam and composite core products.

 

 

            Last-a-Foam tooling board provides aerospace, automotive, marine and other composites manufacturing companies with a high-performance, consistently uniform material that can withstand high temperatures and repeated curing cycles. Affordable and dimensionally stable, this rigid foam board is ideal for prototype machining, high-temperature curing prepregs, vacuum forming, pattern making and other limited-run tooling where traditional metal dies are cost-prohibitive.

 

Last a foam board and CCS-core cutting solutions

 

         

        Available in 3-50-pound densities, this series is non-abrasive, can be machined with standard high-speed steel cutting tools into complex shapes and is available in custom sizes. It can also be cut cleanly with waterjets and traditional wood-carving tools.

 

       General Plastics also offers complete in-house production services that deliver tools machined to final specifications.

According to the company, Last-of-Foam core is renowned for its high strength, low weight and consistent properties. Its formulations are reported to offer a compelling alternative to traditional core materials, such as thermoplastic foam, honeycomb, wood and metal.

       

        General Plastics’ closed-cell, water-resistant core materials meet the requirements of numerous industries and complex applications such as FST/OSU-compliant foam core in aircraft interior sandwich panels; high strength-to-weight ratio core material for automotive load floors; dielectric material for radomes; buoyancy foam in subsea applications; and even impact-resistant core in hockey sticks.

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