Precision aluminum and steel injection molds — designed, machined, and finished in-house. Prototype to production tooling with no outsourcing, no delays.
Most shops separate tooling from production. You wait weeks on a mold shop, ship the tool, then wait again for samples. At Ace's, mold making and injection molding happen under the same roof — which means faster iterations, tighter communication, and molds that are designed to run, not just to print.
When the same team that builds your mold also runs your parts, problems get caught in design — not on the floor. That saves you time, money, and headaches.
From quick-turn prototype tooling to high-volume production molds — we handle the full range.
Fast, affordable tooling for low-to-mid volume production and design validation. 7075 and 6061 aluminum with 2–4 week lead times.
P20 and H13 tool steel for high-volume, long-run production. Hardened inserts, hot runners, and complex lifter/slider geometry available.
Single, 2-cavity, 4-cavity, and family molds designed for maximum output efficiency. Balanced runner systems and matched cavity finishes.
High-temp resin 3D printed molds for ultra-fast prototyping — ready in days, not weeks. Perfect for concept validation before cutting steel.
Gate changes, cavity modifications, weld repairs, texture updates — we rework existing molds to extend life and accommodate design changes.
Design for Manufacturability review before you cut metal. We catch draft issues, wall thickness problems, and gate location headaches early.
Send us your CAD file (STEP, IGES, SolidWorks, or DXF). No CAD? We can work from sketches, samples, or concept drawings.
We review your part for moldability — draft angles, wall thickness, undercuts — and provide a detailed tooling quote. Usually within 24–48 hours.
Our team designs the tool in CAD, programs the CNC toolpaths, and machines the mold in-house. You stay in the loop throughout.
We shoot first-article samples in-house and send them to you for approval. Adjustments are made quickly because the mold never leaves our shop.
Once approved, we move straight into production. Your mold is stored on-site and ready to run — no shipping, no scheduling with a third party.
| Material | Best For | Typical Life | Lead Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6061 Aluminum | Rapid prototype molds, concept validation | 1,000–10,000 shots | 1–2 weeks |
| 7075 Aluminum | Bridge tooling, low-to-mid volume production | 10,000–100,000 shots | 2–4 weeks |
| P20 Steel | Production molds, general-purpose | 500,000+ shots | 4–6 weeks |
| H13 Steel | High-temp resins, abrasive materials, long runs | 1,000,000+ shots | 5–8 weeks |
| High-Temp Resin (3D Printed) | Ultra-fast concept molds, pre-production sampling | 50–500 shots | 1–3 days |
Prototype aluminum molds typically take 2–4 weeks from approved CAD. Production steel molds range from 4–8 weeks depending on complexity. Rush tooling is available for qualifying projects — call us to discuss.
Yes. We build molds for companies that run production at other facilities. We provide fully documented tooling with maintenance records. On-site mold storage is also available.
Absolutely. We repair cracked or worn tooling, relocate gates, add or remove features, update surface textures, and modify cavity dimensions. Bring your mold in for a free evaluation.
We accept STEP, IGES, SolidWorks (.SLDPRT), Parasolid, and DXF. If you don't have a CAD file, we can reverse-engineer from a physical sample or work from detailed drawings.
There's no minimum order quantity for tooling — we quote every project individually. Small prototype molds and one-off specialty tools are welcome. We specialize in the jobs big shops turn away.
Yes. We offer scheduled preventive maintenance, cleaning, and inspection programs for molds stored on-site. Ask about our mold maintenance agreement.
We don't stop at tooling. Every capability you need — under one roof.
In-depth guides from our tool room to help you make better decisions.
From DFM review through CNC machining, EDM, polishing, and first article — the complete mold making process explained.
Hardness, wear resistance, cost, and mold life — a side-by-side comparison of the two most common injection mold steels.
Planning a custom injection mold? Materials, lead times, costs, and what to expect at every step from a Long Island mold shop.