Polymer plastic casting is a low- to medium-volume manufacturing process where liquid polymer resin is poured into a mold and left to cure into a solid shape.
Unlike injection molding, it doesn’t require high pressure — making it great for prototypes, specialty parts, or large shapes without expensive tooling.
A mold is made (commonly from silicone, metal, or plastic) based on the desired part shape.
Liquid polymer resin is mixed with additives (color pigments, fillers, catalysts, etc.).
The liquid resin is poured or injected into the mold cavity.
The resin chemically reacts and hardens, either at room temperature or with heat.
Once hardened, the part is removed from the mold.
Any flash or imperfections are trimmed, sanded, or polished.
Molds are cheaper than injection molding steel molds.
Works for both small runs and custom parts.
Can cast large, thick pieces without huge machines.
Works with epoxy, polyurethane, acrylic, polyester resins.
Captures fine details from the mold surface.
4 axle CNC machining shows up in nearly every sector:
Quick, cost-effective production of test parts.
Clear acrylic letters, decorative panels.
Specialty housings, low-volume enclosures.
Sculptures, decorative castings, resin art.
Gaskets, bushings, rollers.
Polymer casting is more accessible and affordable than high-pressure molding processes, making it ideal for small-batch or custom production. While not as fast or scalable as injection molding, it’s perfect for flexible manufacturing, low startup costs, and complex designs.