Thermoform Molding
Why Forté Products
We have the people, the expertise, the machines and the capacity to manufacture your parts to your specifications and quality requirements.
Forté Thermoform Highlights

Offering 3 molding styles – Vacuum, Pressure, Twin Sheet

½ dozen machines for sheet sizes up to 60″ x 96“

Expertise utilizing ABS, HMPE, TPO & Polycarbonate materials

Rotary Machines for higher volumes

5-axis CNC

“moldability” Engineering Assessment

Secondary Assembly Capabilities

Available In-house Freight Logistics
Thermoforming basics
Thermoforming is shaping a heated thermoplastic sheet over a mold, then cooling and trimming it into a finished part.
• It starts with flat plastic sheet (thermoplastic means it softens with heat and hardens again when cooled).
• The sheet is formed using vacuum, air pressure, or matched tooling, then trimmed to final edges/features.
• It’s a process family that includes vacuum forming, pressure forming, and twin-sheet forming.
Vacuum forming is a type of thermoforming that uses suction to pull a heated plastic sheet onto a single-sided mold.
• The mold can be “male” (sheet pulled over) or “female” (sheet pulled into).
• Vacuum forming is often chosen when one show-surface needs the most control and the opposite side can be less precise.
Vacuum forming process
Typical steps are: clamp, heat, form with vacuum, cool, release, trim, and inspect.
• Clamp: hold sheet flat and sealed.
• Heat: bring sheet to a formable temperature window.
• Form: pull sheet to the mold using vacuum.
• Cool + release: set the shape, then remove safely.
• Trim + inspect: cut openings/edges and verify critical features.
Machines and equipment
A thermoforming machine clamps and heats plastic sheet, forms it over tooling using vacuum and/or air pressure (and sometimes plug assists), then cools and sends parts to trimming.
• Thermoforming machines can be set up for different forming styles: vacuum, pressure, twin-sheet, and matched tooling variants.
• Trimming may be inline or done as a secondary step (for example, CNC trimming for complex edges/openings).
Materials
You pick the plastic that meets your strength, surface, temperature, chemical-resistance, and cost targets; ABS is common for durable housings, while polycarbonate is used when higher impact performance and heat resistance are needed.
• ABS: often chosen for toughness and a good balance of cost and finish.
• Polycarbonate (PC): often chosen when higher impact performance and heat resistance matter.
• TPO: often used where flexibility and weathering performance are priorities.
• Polyethylene family (including higher-molecular-weight grades): often used where abrasion/chemical resistance and toughness are needed.
