USA Made Manufacturing

Microplastics Explained from the Factory Floor

8 min · 10. mai 2026
episode Microplastics Explained from the Factory Floor cover

Beskrivelse

Microplastics are a real concern. But most conversations miss what actually happens inside manufacturing. In this episode, we break down how injection molders operate to reduce waste and limit microplastic generation. From clean facilities and material handling to regrind processes and efficient production, this is a practical look at what's happening on the ground. We also talk about where microplastics are more likely to come from and why manufacturing is only part of the conversation.

Kommentarer

0

Vær den første til å kommentere

Registrer deg nå og bli medlem av USA Made Manufacturing sitt community!

Kom i gang

2 Måneder for 19 kr

Deretter 99 kr / Måned · Avslutt når som helst.

  • Eksklusive podkaster
  • 20 timer lydbøker i måneden
  • Gratis podkaster

Alle episoder

15 Episoder

episode You Went Viral… Now Everything's Breaking cover

You Went Viral… Now Everything's Breaking

In this episode, we walk through what actually starts breaking when demand spikes faster than your system can handle. This isn't just about manufacturing. It's everything around it. Inventory disappears overnight. Your mold isn't on the machine. Customer service gets overwhelmed. Shipping slows down. Returns increase. Cash flow gets messy. And if you're not careful, your reputation takes the hit. We break down what happens behind the scenes when a product suddenly takes off, whether it's from a viral video, influencer mention, or just bad forecasting. This is the part of scaling no one talks about. And it's where most small brands get caught off guard. We reply to every comment that moves the conversation forward. #Manufacturing #SupplyChain #ProductDevelopment #SmallBusiness #InventoryManagement #USAMade #Entrepreneurship #viralvideo

3. mai 202619 min
episode Injection Molding Cost Breakdown (What You're Actually Paying For) cover

Injection Molding Cost Breakdown (What You're Actually Paying For)

If you've ever looked at an injection molding quote and wondered where the cost actually comes from, this episode walks through it from the inside. We break down what drives pricing in a real facility. Raw material, tooling that's paid off over time, and the people on the floor moving parts, checking quality, and keeping machines running. Then we get into the part most customers miss. Changeovers. Swapping molds, dialing in material, purging color, and running test shots before a part is even ready. This is why short runs don't make sense, why schedules matter, and why your job can't just get dropped into a machine on demand. If you're building a physical product, this is the side of manufacturing that affects your margins whether you see it or not.

19. april 202616 min
episode How the Iran Conflict Is Driving Plastic Shortages and Price Spikes cover

How the Iran Conflict Is Driving Plastic Shortages and Price Spikes

Resin is tightening up. We're seeing force majeures stack (Force majeure means a supplier can't meet contract terms due to events outside their control. When it's declared, supply gets limited or delayed, normal pricing and delivery terms may not hold, allocations hit distributors, and quotes shorten or get pulled. ABS is taking the biggest hit as imports drop off, while domestic supply was already short of demand. At the same time: • Domestic producers are pushing increases and getting them • Polypropylene and polyethylene are getting pulled into export • Prices are moving week to week, sometimes faster • Quotes are good for 24 hours or less • Forward PO's and forecasting are getting priority This is less about price and more about getting material. Inside the shop, it shows up as: • Interrupted runs when material doesn't land on time • More frequent changeovers • Substitution conversations getting real, not theoretical • Customers being pushed to commit earlier than they're used to We walk through what this looks like from the molder side and what you should be thinking about right now. • What changed in the last 30 days • Why supply is the real problem, not price • How allocation actually works • ABS vs Poly vs Polyethylene right now • What big buyers are doing differently • Backup materials and "break glass" options • What happens next (6–12 month outlook) If you're buying material or running parts, this is a stay close and stay flexible situation. www.air-rep.net [https://www.air-rep.net] https://youtu.be/Jb4SVjPHpPw [https://youtu.be/Jb4SVjPHpPw]

14. april 202624 min
episode How to Survive Feedback in Product Development cover

How to Survive Feedback in Product Development

Getting feedback on your product is hard, especially when you have time, money, and identity wrapped up in the idea. In this episode, we break down why product feedback feels personal, what manufacturers are actually trying to tell you during design review, and how beta testing, customer reviews, and real world product use can expose problems early. If you are building a physical product in the U.S., this episode will help you separate useful feedback from emotional noise, understand the difference between manufacturability feedback and customer feedback, and make better decisions before you spend more money on tooling, prototypes, and revisions. We talk through design for manufacturability, prototype testing, product reviews, misuse, product changes, and how founders can stay focused on the real customer instead of reacting to every opinion. #USManufacturing #ProductDevelopment #MadeInUSA #InventorTips #BetaTesting #PrototypeTesting

5. april 202629 min