The spa shells themselves, of course aren't injection molded, they're rotationally molded. It's a totally different type of molding process than what I explained in the last chapter. Injection molding you squirt molten plastic into a cavity. Rotational molding takes a bit more explanation. Really you have to see it to get a grasp on what it is. Even then it's very helpful to have it explained.
I'll explain what the small square spa is tomorrow.
If you read the wikipedia entry on rotational molding they say that it was invented back in the 40s. That's not entirely true since what they're including isn't very much like rotomolding today. They were using this vinyl-type thermoset stuff and the molds weren't very similar at all. About the only thing that was similar was that a powder was put in a mold and it coated the walls and cured. To broaden the definition of rotomolding that much you'd have to consider what happened when that dude came up with safety glass as being rotomolding too. He just swished around some fluid in a beaker and it got coated with a thermoset. If you include that then rotomolding was invented back in the 1903s er something. At any rate, Howard n Dave didn't know about that vinyl stuff until decades later. Pretty much all the development of the process was done by plain ol' intuitive American engineering and invented as a fresh molding technique. The first mold was an aluminum briefcase. It was funny hearing Dave tell the story of that.


