The History of Blow Molding
Plastic blow molding is the process of blowing air into a machine to change the shape of plastic. Often, blow molding is combined with the use of molds to create intricate shapes made with thin, hollow plastic pieces. Plastic blow molding did not exist until the late 1930s when a pair of inventors realized the potential for blow molding in the world of plastics.
In 1938, two inventors, Enoch Ferngren and William Kopitke, thought of a way to use the principles of glass blowing in the plastics industry. They created the first plastic blow molding machine and sold it to the Hartford Empire Company. Throughout the 1940s, plastic blow molding was still a new art, and not many companies used the machines because plastic was such a new material at the time.
It was not until the 1970s that plastic blow molding really took off. The invention of the plastic soda container was one of the first products to utilize the potential of plastic blow molding fully. Once this process was discovered, blow molding manufacturers popped up all over the United States and the world. Blow molding was used to quickly shape the bottles used for soda storage, including small individual serving bottles and the larger 2 and 3 liter bottles. In fact, soda plastic bottle production by blow molding manufacturers was so successful that the amount of plastic soda bottles in production grew from zero to over 10 billion in just 20 years.
Today, blow molded plastic has uses for many different plastic productions, including soda bottles, dairy containers, shampoo bottles, hoses, industrial drums, jars, and many other plastic objects and containers. The use of blow molding has not only cut down on the production time for many plastic products, but also plastic waste, due to the small amount of plastic waste created in the molding process.