Should You Use Conformal Cooling? A Scoring Framework
Conformal cooling adds cost and complexity. It is not the right answer for every mold — and applying it where it isn't needed is a waste of budget. The first design decision is whether to use it at all.
Use this scoring framework. Add up points based on your part and production characteristics:
CAD model showing optimized conformal cooling channel layout
Part has deep cores or pins (>30mm depth)+25
Complex 3D geometry — drilled channels cannot reach within 20mm of all surfaces+20
Non-uniform wall thickness causing temperature variation >8°C on cavity surface (simulation)+20
Annual production >100,000 shots/year+15
Current cooling time is >40% of total cycle time+15
Active quality defects: warpage, sink marks, or burn marks despite well-designed conventional cooling+15
Total cycle time <15 seconds (cooling already fast)−15
Total Score
Recommendation
Rationale
<20
✗ Do not specify
Conventional cooling is adequate; conformal cost cannot be recovered
20–39
⚠ Marginal — evaluate ROI
May be justified; run a thermal simulation to quantify benefit before committing
40–59
⚠ Likely justified
Conformal cooling will improve quality or cycle time; verify with Moldflow before specifying
60+
✓ Strongly recommended
Conventional cooling will not solve the problem; conformal is the engineering-correct choice
The fastest decision path: If your part has a deep core (>30mm) AND annual volume >50,000 shots, that alone scores 40 points — conformal is almost certainly justified. Run the Moldflow simulation to quantify the benefit and set the design parameters, but the go/no-go decision is already clear.
The Hybrid Approach: Not Everything Needs Conformal
The most cost-effective conformal cooling design is almost never "conformal cooling everywhere." It's targeted conformal inserts in the zones that need them, combined with conventional drilled channels everywhere else. This hybrid approach captures 70–90% of the total thermal performance benefit at 30–50% of the cost of full conformal.
Zoning your mold: where conformal inserts are justified
Mold Zone
Conformal Insert?
Why
Deep cores (>30mm depth)
✓ Always conformal
Drilled channels cannot enter core geometry; baffle inserts are inadequate; this zone controls minimum cycle time
Complex 3D cavity surfaces (undercuts, ribs, bosses)
✓ Conformal where >20mm from nearest drilled channel
Drilled channels leave hot zones in geometrically complex areas; these cause warpage and sink marks
Thick sections (>4mm wall)
✓ Conformal — zone these areas
Thick sections are rate-limiting for cooling; targeted conformal inserts at thick zones cuts cycle time most efficiently
Gate area (near injection point)
✓ Often conformal (CuCrZr)
Gate area receives hottest material first; local overheating causes gate vestige and stringing
Flat cavity faces with uniform thin wall
Conventional — drilled channels adequate
Straight channels at correct pitch and distance work well for flat, uniform-thickness surfaces
Parting line areas, runner systems
Conventional
Accessible geometry; drilled channels reach easily; no thermal advantage to conformal
80/20 rule of conformal cooling: In most complex molds, 20% of the mold surface area causes 80% of the cooling problems. Identify those zones with a Moldflow hotspot analysis and apply conformal inserts only there. You'll spend ~30% of the cost of full conformal but solve ~80% of the cooling performance gap.
Application-Specific Design Approaches
Conformal cooling design parameters and priorities differ significantly by application. A one-size-fits-all approach to channel diameter, wall distance, and routing produces mediocre results across all applications. Here's how to adjust the design for the five most common scenarios:
Finished mold incorporating conformal cooling design for uniform temperature control
🚗
Automotive Structural Parts
Challenge: Glass-filled PA66, PBT — long cycle times, warpage in large structural parts. See our automotive application guide
Priority: Cycle time reduction + dimensional stability. Multi-cavity balance is critical — all cavities must be at identical temperature to prevent weight and dimension variation. Use parallel circuit layout so each cavity is independently temperature-controlled. 18Ni300 steel for high-pressure, high-cavitation molds.
D=8–10mm · W=10–12mm · P=18–22mm · Parallel circuits per cavity
Priority: Surface quality over cycle time. Tight temperature uniformity (±2°C target) on the class-A surface side. Use tighter pitch (1.8–2×D) on cavity side facing the visible surface. Series routing acceptable for single-cavity if cavity is <300mm. Mirror-polish cavity face to SPI A1 requires hardened steel — 420 SS minimum.
Challenge: PC transparent panels, optical lenses — burn marks, birefringence, dimensional tolerance <±0.05mm. See our medical device cooling guide
Priority: Temperature uniformity and dimensional stability. PC requires precise mold temperature control (80–120°C); conformal channels on both cavity and core sides. Flow isolation between cavity and core circuits so each can be independently temperature-set. 18Ni300 for minimal distortion during heat treatment — maintains dimensional accuracy of mating surfaces better than 420 SS.
Challenge: PP, PE — already fast cycle, but multi-cavity balance and warpage in large flat lids/containers
Priority: Temperature uniformity — not cycle time (already 8–15 seconds). Cooling time is already short; the value of conformal cooling is eliminating the temperature gradients that cause lid-level curl and stacking problems. High cavitation (32–96 cavities) demands perfect balance. CuCrZr targeted inserts at corner zones; 420 SS elsewhere. Mold temperature 15–25°C, chilled water circuit.
D=6mm · W=8mm · P=14mm · CuCrZr at corners, 420 SS main body
⚙️
Deep Core / Long Pin Geometry
Challenge: Any material — core tip unreachable by drilling; conventional baffle inserts create single-point cooling only
Priority: Core tip cooling. Spiral channel geometry wrapping from tip to base at 8–10mm offset. If core diameter <16mm, use CuCrZr for 13× better thermal conductivity to compensate for geometric constraint on channel size. Validate with Moldflow simulation specifically on core tip temperature — this is the rate-limiting zone for the whole mold.
Spiral geometry · D=6–8mm · CuCrZr if core dia <16mm
Priority: Controlled, uniform cooling at elevated mold temperature (160–200°C). Oil-based TCU at 140–180°C — water channels are not used above 90°C. CuCrZr inserts at critical zones for faster heat extraction rate. Insulation between conformal zones and mold base to prevent cold spots. Higher inspection standard — pressure-test channels at 1.5× oil operating pressure.
CuCrZr inserts · Oil TCU 140–180°C · Pressure test to 15 bar
Integrating Conformal Inserts into Mold Design
Conformal cooling inserts are drop-in components that fit into the existing mold base structure. They do not require redesigning the entire mold — only the specific zones being upgraded. Here's how integration works in practice:
1
Define insert boundaries based on hotspot zones
From Moldflow hotspot analysis, identify the minimum zone that needs conformal cooling. Draw the insert boundary to include that zone plus 15–20mm margin on all sides for structural integrity and sealing. The insert fits into a pocket machined into the mold base.
2
Design the insert pocket in the mold base
The mold base receives a precisely machined pocket with O-ring groove seals and coolant inlet/outlet passages. Pocket dimensions are toleranced to ±0.02mm for a press-fit insert interface. The insert has a positive register (step or dowel pin) to ensure it cannot shift during injection.
3
Route coolant connections
Inlet and outlet passages from the conformal insert connect to the mold base coolant circuit. For inserts replacing existing conventional zones: the new conformal circuit runs in parallel with or replaces the existing drilled circuit in that zone. Isolate conformal circuits from conventional circuits where independent temperature control is needed.
4
Retain ejector pin and guide pin clearances
Channel routing must avoid ejector pin locations — typically specified in the mold layout. Guide pin and guide bush clearance zones are no-channel areas. This constraint must be given to the conformal insert designer before channel routing begins, not after.
5
Specify cavity surface finish on the insert
The cavity-facing surface of the conformal insert must be polished to the same specification as the rest of the mold cavity (e.g., SPI A2, VDI 18). This is post-print CNC and polishing work. Specify the exact SPI or VDI standard in the drawing — "polished" is not a specification.
6
Verify thermal isolation or connection between zones
If the conformal insert runs at a different temperature than the surrounding mold steel (e.g., a hot PC tool with a cold gate insert), specify an air gap or insulating plate between the zones. Without thermal isolation, heat conducts across the interface and degrades both zones' temperature control.
Key coordination point: Share ejector pin locations, guide pin positions, and waterline routing in the surrounding mold steel with the conformal insert manufacturer before they design the channel layout. These constraints eliminate 20–40% of the theoretically available channel routing space and must be reflected in the final design.
Working on a mold design and unsure where conformal inserts belong?
Share your part file and current mold layout. Our engineers will identify the optimal insert zones, estimate the performance gain per zone, and provide a cost breakdown — before you commit to the design.
One of the most valuable and underused applications of conformal cooling is retrofitting existing molds — replacing the problematic zones in an already-running mold with conformal inserts. This is often the right first step before committing to a full new-mold design.
Retrofit Conformal Insert
Replace only the problem zone (core, hotspot area)
Mold base, runner, ejector, sliders unchanged
Cost: 15–35% of new mold cost
Lead time: 10–16 days for insert
Risk: low — existing mold structure proven
Achieves 70–90% of a purpose-designed conformal mold's performance
Easy to justify: clear before/after comparison available
Best when: Existing mold is running but has a specific chronic problem (one zone always hot, one core always causing rejects) that conventional re-cooling hasn't solved.
New Mold with Conformal Design
Conformal cooling designed in from the start
Full thermal optimization — no legacy constraints
Channel routing optimized without retrofit compromises
Higher upfront cost — full mold investment
Lead time: full mold lead time (30–60+ days)
Best possible performance — no legacy constraint
Required when geometry makes retrofit impossible
Best when: New part requiring new mold; or existing mold is at end of life and full redesign is already planned; or retrofit analysis shows that only 40% of problem zones can be accessed via insert replacement.
The retrofit decision test
Before committing to a new mold, ask three questions:
Is the quality/cycle problem localized? If yes (one core, one zone), a retrofit insert addresses it without touching the rest of the mold.
Is the existing mold base in good condition? If the mold base, sliders, ejector system, and runner are all functioning correctly and have remaining life, a full new mold is wasteful.
Can a conformal insert physically fit? Some mold zones are too small or too constrained by surrounding components (ejector pins, guide pins) to accommodate an insert with internal channels. If the constrained zone is the problem zone, a new mold with redesigned layout may be required.
Design Tradeoffs and How to Resolve Them
Tradeoff
Tension
Resolution
Wall distance vs. cooling effectiveness
Thinner wall = better cooling but higher crack risk
Use FEA to validate structural integrity at 1.0×D wall distance. Upgrade to 18Ni300 if 420 SS FEA shows stress concentration. Only increase wall distance if FEA confirms structural requirement — not as a default precaution.
Pitch density vs. cost
Tighter pitch = more uniform temperature but more channels = higher print cost
Run Moldflow at 2.5×D pitch (standard). Only tighten to 1.8×D if simulation shows temperature non-uniformity >±4°C. Tighter pitch in hotspot zones, standard pitch elsewhere — zone-dependent pitch is acceptable in one insert.
Conformal coverage area vs. insert count
One large insert is cheaper per area; multiple small inserts give targeted control
One insert per thermal zone where independent temperature control is needed. Combine zones running at the same temperature into one insert. Never combine a hot zone (PC, 80°C) and a cold zone (PP, 25°C) in one insert — they'll fight each other.
Spiral core vs. series routing
Spiral covers core tip better; series is simpler to design and validate
Use spiral routing for all cores deeper than 30mm. Use series/conformal routing for cavity faces. Never use series routing for a deep core — it misses the tip, which is exactly where the heat concentrates.
Material cost (18Ni300 vs. 420 SS)
18Ni300 is 40–60% more expensive but has superior properties
Use 420 SS as default. Upgrade to 18Ni300 when: wall thickness <8mm (thin-wall inserts need higher strength), glass-filled abrasive plastics (>20% glass), or >8 cavities with high clamping force. CuCrZr only for targeted inserts in maximum-heat zones.
Manufacturer Brief: What to Send for an Accurate Quote
The quality of a conformal cooling insert quote depends entirely on the information provided. Use our RFQ checklist as a starting point. Incomplete briefs result in over-conservative designs (channels too far from surface), wrong material selection, or missed constraints that require expensive re-design after printing. Here's a complete brief checklist:
📁 Required Files Required
Part STEP file (the plastic part being molded)
Insert boundary drawing — the zone you want as a conformal insert, with overall dimensions
Plastic material (full grade: e.g., "PA66-GF30, Lanxess Durethan BKV30H2.0")
Melt temperature and mold temperature target
Current cycle time and cooling time (if running in existing mold)
Primary defect you're trying to solve (warpage, burn marks, cycle time, multi-cavity balance)
Annual production volume (shots/year)
🔧 Mold Integration Specs Required
Insert pocket dimensions and tolerance (±0.02mm recommended for mating surfaces)
Cavity surface finish requirement (SPI standard: A1/A2/B1/B2 or VDI number)
Fitting thread standard: BSP (metric) or NPT (US/inch) — and connection size
Operating coolant pressure (bar)
📊 Helpful Additions Optional but Speeds Quote
Moldflow simulation results showing hotspot zones (temperature map at end of pack)
Photo or drawing of existing cooling in the problem zone
Competitor insert drawing if this is a replacement order
Target cycle time reduction (e.g., "from 42s to under 28s")
Budget range — helps manufacturer recommend 420 SS vs. 18Ni300 appropriately
The most valuable item on this list is the Moldflow hotspot temperature map. With it, we can confirm channel placement, pitch, and wall distance in the first design iteration. Without it, we design conservatively — which means channels further from the surface and wider pitch — and you get 60–70% of achievable performance. If you don't have Moldflow access, ask us: we can run a baseline simulation from your part file before designing the insert.
Ready to Start Your Conformal Cooling Design?
Send your part file and mold layout. We'll confirm which zones need conformal inserts, recommend insert material and geometry, and quote with full lead time — within 24 hours of receiving your files.
When should I specify conformal cooling in my mold design?
Conformal cooling gives the strongest return when at least one exists: deep cores (>30mm), complex 3D geometry where drilled channels can't reach within 20mm of the surface, non-uniform wall thickness causing thermal gradients, annual volume >50,000 shots, or active quality defects from uneven cooling. Use the scoring framework in this article — a score of 60+ points means conformal cooling is the engineering-correct choice.
Should the whole mold use conformal cooling or only specific inserts?
Almost always: targeted inserts in problem zones only. Identify the 20% of mold surface causing 80% of cooling problems using Moldflow hotspot analysis, then apply conformal inserts only there. The rest uses conventional drilled channels. This hybrid approach costs 30–50% less than full conformal while delivering 70–90% of the performance benefit.
How does conformal cooling design differ for thin-wall vs. thick-wall parts?
Thin-wall (<1.5mm): cooling time is already short; the value is temperature uniformity to prevent warpage. Use tighter pitch (1.5–2×D) and closer wall distance (1.0×D). Thick-wall (>3mm): cycle time reduction is the goal; use series conformal routing zoned to the thickest sections. The thickest section determines minimum cycle time — concentrate cooling effort there.
What information do I need to provide to a conformal cooling manufacturer?
Required: (1) Part STEP file. (2) Insert boundary drawing with dimensions. (3) Mold layout showing ejector pins, guide pins, existing waterlines. (4) Plastic material and processing temperatures. (5) Current cycle time and primary defect. (6) Annual volume. (7) Cavity surface finish specification (SPI standard). (8) Fitting thread standard (BSP or NPT) and operating pressure. Optional but valuable: Moldflow hotspot temperature map, existing mold photos.
Can conformal cooling inserts be retrofitted into an existing mold?
Yes — this is one of the most cost-effective applications. Replace only the problem zone with a conformal insert machined to fit the existing pocket. The mold base, runner, ejector, and sliders stay unchanged. Retrofit inserts typically cost 15–35% of a new mold and achieve 70–90% of a purpose-designed conformal mold's performance. Best used when the problem is localized (one chronic hotspot or deep core) and the rest of the mold is functioning correctly.