Technical document

What's the Difference Between Two-Color Injection Molding and Overmolding?

2025-08-06 09:59:45 Two-Color Injection Molding

In modern plastic processing, two-color injection molding and overmolding are key technologies for multi-material

 forming. Understanding their differences helps optimize production efficiency and reduce costs.

1. Equipment & Molds

Two-Color Injection Molding

Relies on specialized two-color machines with dual barrels and nozzles. A single mold with two cavities uses rotary 

mechanisms (turntables or cores) to switch positions between injections, enabling automated continuous production.

Overmolding

Uses two separate molds and can work with standard injection machines. After the first molding, semi-finished parts are 

manually or robotically transferred to the second mold, requiring more manual intervention.

injection mould

2. Process Flow

Two-Color Injection Molding

Completes both injections in one machine/mold sequentially. Typically, rigid materials (e.g., PC) form the base first, followed 

by flexible materials (e.g., TPE/TPU) for functional layers. Strict material compatibility (melt point, shrinkage) is required due 

to rapid consecutive injection.

Overmolding

Follows a two-step process: first molding, demolding, then repositioning for the second injection. Supports diverse material 

combinations (e.g., metal-plastic, silicone-plastic) but may need surface treatments (e.g., primer coating) to enhance adhesion 

for incompatible materials.

injection mould

3. Applications

Two-Color Injection Molding

Ideal for mass-produced, high-precision products:

Automotive: Dashboard buttons, shift knobs

Electronics: Phone cases, tablet frames

Overmolding

Suitable for small-batch, complex or special combinations:

Medical: Silicone-sealed plastic components

Home goods: Metal-decorated plastic parts

injection mould

4. Cost & Efficiency

Two-Color Injection Molding

High initial mold costs but excels in mass production with fast cycles, low labor input, and stable quality—reducing unit costs 

significantly at scale.

Overmolding

Lower initial mold investment but higher labor costs and slower cycles due to manual transfers. Prone to errors (e.g., misalignment), 

increasing defect rates, making it cost-effective only for small batches.

Summary

Two-color molding suits large-scale, high-precision production with its automation and consistency. Overmolding offers flexibility 

for small-batch, complex designs. Choosing the right process depends on production volume, material combinations, and cost targets.

injection mould

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