Sounds like a 14 day per week "JOB" to me. Be prepared to be married to it. If you tackle it, you'll have to hire a couple people to help you out. Can't do it all your self.
Keep your eye's and mind on task at hand.
ALWAYS wear gloves. Safety glasses.
Have plenty of room. Don't be cramped into a small space.
Keep a bucket of water close in case you get some hot plastic on you.
I keep my plastic in 5 gal buckets. Usually buy a 55 gal drum at a time. During the cold months it will settle out and I just take the lid off and use a paint mixer on a drill. Takes a while to get it mixed, but it will mix.
I use a heat gun to warm the top layer of plastic and then pour another layer. A swimbait that has developed an uneven/depression from cooling can be filled in this manner.
Which mold is the closest to the Berkley 3" Chigger Craw? I have the 702 Craw from Basstackle, but it is much larger, and am looking for a close match in size, both in length and flapper.
Go back and think about the creepy crawlers from the late 60's/early 70's. There were colored plastics in bottles that were squirted in the molds and then cooked. I saw a video a while back with the same concept. Same thing as the Lureworks machine with injection.
Exhaust fan rated at 5.34 amps
4 Presto pots with stir motors
1 Shooting Star system
1 Jacobs Baits Injection Machine and small pancake compressor
12000 BTU air conditioner/heater combo.
2 rows flourescent lights/8 pairs
radio/cd player
19" TV
table top Metal lathe
2 heat guns
color shaker
stir motor for cold plastic
Maybe overkill, but better to have too much and not need it than to need more and not have it.