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Internal details of a two head, gantry style pick-and-place JUKI SMT machine. In the foreground are tape and reel feeders, then the (currently empty) conveyor belt for printed circuit boards, and in back are large parts in a tray. The gantry carries two pickup nozzles, flanking a camera (marked "do not touch" to avoid fingerprints on the lens).
SMEMA is an acronym for the Surface Mount Equipment Manufacturers Association.. In 1999 they merged with the IPC to form the IPC SMEMA Council. [1]One standard they have is for the wiring of communications between Surface mount technology producing machinery such as a Stencil Printer or a Pick and Place Machine on an Electronics production line.
Flexible placer, chip shooter, and other specialized machines. PWB with solder print. Components supplied by feeders. Computer files: computer program controls location of each component on the PWB (X, Y and angular theta), feeder inventory levels, placement machine vacuum holder capability, automatic component realignment, placement accuracy, vision systems, and transportation of PCBs through ...
The components to be placed on the boards are usually delivered to the production line in either paper/plastic tapes wound on reels or plastic tubes. Some large integrated circuits are delivered in static-free trays. Numerical control pick-and-place machines remove the parts from the tapes, tubes or trays and place them on the PCB. [7]
Pick and place is the act of picking things up from one location and placing them in another. Specific cases include: picking and placing is one of the major uses of industrial robots; in the context of electronics, SMT placement equipment
While generally not considered to be a machine element, the shape, texture and color of covers are an important part of a machine that provide a styling and operational interface between the mechanical components of a machine and its users. Machine elements are basic mechanical parts and features used as the building blocks of most machines. [2]
No one makes a chipshooter anymore. Fuji and Universal have transitioned away from big expensive chipshooters to more modular multi-turreted machines that are more flexible to production changes and are a more of an all-in-one machine vs. having a chipshooter and a seperate fine-pitch placement machine. Paly 1 12:56, 6 May 2009 (UTC)
Kinematic diagram of Cartesian (coordinate) robot A plotter is a type of Cartesian coordinate robot.. A Cartesian coordinate robot (also called linear robot) is an industrial robot whose three principal axes of control are linear (i.e. they move in a straight line rather than rotate) and are at right angles to each other. [1]