Since Milacron introduced all electric injection molding technology in 1985, the Elektron series has become a benchmark for high-precision injection molding in the medical, automotive, consumer goods, and construction industries. Compared to traditional hydraulic presses, the Elektron series can save 60% energy and 90% water, and has no risk of hydraulic oil leakage, making it suitable for clean room operation. This series offers three models: 400, 500, and 600, with locking forces ranging from 970 kN to 4550 kN. The modular design of the injection unit allows for flexible matching of different product requirements.
However, any high-precision equipment will face problems such as mechanical wear, electrical aging, and parameter drift during long-term operation. When Elektron experiences unstable injection, abnormal locking force, touch screen crashes, or alarms that cannot be cleared, on-site engineers need to quickly locate the root cause and restore production. This article is based on official technical information from Milacron, combined with years of on-site service experience, to provide a detailed breakdown of the maintenance points, troubleshooting process, and replacement solutions for discontinued spare parts for Elektron 400/500/600.
Chapter 1 Overview of Core Technology Architecture
1.1 Advantages of fully electric vehicles
The Elektron series completely abandons hydraulic oil and all actions are driven by high-precision servo motors:
Energy saving: Compared to hydraulic presses, energy consumption is reduced by 60%; No need for hydraulic oil cooling, reducing water consumption by 90%.
Dynamic: All axes (locking, injection, ejection, plasticization) can achieve fully parallel motion, with no additional options required for standard configuration.
Precision: The injection pressure can reach up to 33350 psi (2300 bar), and the load sensor directly monitors the melt pressure, with repeatability far exceeding that of hydraulic systems.
Cleanliness: There is no risk of oil leakage, oil mist, or slipping due to oil stains, and it can be directly installed in an ISO 7 cleanroom.
1.2 Model and Framework
Model Frame Options Locking Force Range Typical Injection Unit
400 970/1540/2290 kN 970-2290 kN Maximum injection volume 22.8 oz (646 g)
500 1540/2290/3470 kN, injection volume of 1540-3470 kN, maximum 76.9 oz (2179 g)
600 2290/3470/4550 kN 2290-4550 kN Maximum injection volume 105 oz (3142 g)
Each injection unit model offers three screw diameter options: A/B/C (e.g. 400 type: 45/50/60 mm), with an L/D ratio of 20-28 and a maximum screw speed of 350 rpm.
Chapter 2: In Depth Analysis of Endura Touch Control System
2.1 Hardware and Interface
Elektron comes standard with a B&R high-performance controller and a 15 inch color touchscreen. 32 physical function keys with LED backlighting are arranged around the screen, supporting quick access to commonly used pages. The design concept is' no more than two clicks on any page '.
External interface:
3 USB ports (supporting exporting mold data, screenshots, and alarm records from USB drives)
RS232 (connect to printer or barcode scanner)
Ethernet (for remote monitoring or MES connection)
2.2 Key monitoring functions
Process monitoring: Display the minimum/maximum/average values of 33 parameters (injection peak pressure, plasticizing time, locking force, etc.) from the last 150 cycles in graphical form.
Alarm History: Stores the last 3000 alarms with dates and timestamps.
Change log: Record the last 3000 set value modifications for easy traceability of process adjustment responsibilities.
Internal storage: up to 80 sets of mold parameters.
Access permission: Level 4 security level, supporting up to 100 operators.
I/O expansion: 3 freely configurable inputs+3 freely configurable outputs (expandable).
2.3 Common HMI Malfunctions and Troubleshooting
Phenomenon 1: Touch screen has no response or slow response
Possible reasons: Oil stains/static electricity accumulation on the surface of the capacitive screen; System memory overload (long-term uncleaned cache).
Solution: Wipe the screen with a soft damp cloth (non corrosive cleaner); Execute 'memory optimization' through the Service menu. If it still doesn't work, check if the wiring of the touch control board on the back is loose.
Phenomenon 2: Alarm history shows a large amount of "servo following error"
Reason: Powerlink real-time communication interruption or servo drive overload.
Troubleshooting: Check the axis corresponding to the alarm (such as the injection axis) and measure the temperature of the servo motor; Check if the shielding of the motor power line and encoder feedback line is good; Observe whether the current waveform is smooth through the "Driver Diagnosis" page of Endura Touch.
Phenomenon 3: The USB drive cannot recognize or fails to save
Reason: Insufficient power supply to the USB interface or incompatible file system (Elektron only supports FAT32 format).
Processing: Use a FAT32 formatted USB flash drive with a capacity of ≤ 32GB; Avoid using USB extension cords; Try the rear USB port (more stable than the front port).