--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "OpenPnP" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to openpnp+u...@googlegroups.com.
To post to this group, send email to ope...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/openpnp/0f46fd18-5e70-4260-80e9-0384e0071147%40googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
Yep, I think that's new. I was recently looking for something like this and didn't find it. I'm going to get one and try it.
Bernd I need to build the block for Yamaha pneumatic feeders. As I know one of the options is the complete block like this, containing every valves already:
https://www.aliexpress.com/store/product/YAMAHA-mounting-block-for-feeders-16-port-unit/1457082_2055215603.html?spm=2114.12010612.0.0.7e0f065fBmS2Gm
The block which you show from Robotdigg is an alternative option to above but requiring to buy and attach the valves separately? It's interresting for me what kind of the pneumatic valves you plan to buy for your block and what will be total cost of the whole set.
What is the spacing between the feeders? I've been curious to know this for a long time...
You were right Bernd, it's used original. However still worth to consider.
Could you pls write me dimensions of your 30-slots plate?. Specially thickness pls check with caliper if you didn't check this page with the Chinese feeders yet (as I know there were some problems with this in case of some Chinese blocks that didn't fit to feeders).
Cri, this your 25-slots block is available to buy separately? I expect that Bernd's 30-slots block will be to long for my machine.
I rather prefer use non-original but new feeders, even if Chinese. I have one that feeder here and it looks rather good about the quality.
If they want $128 for this block, not sure if worth to clone it, just looking on price. Even if need it to cut it to make shorter.
Robotdigg has these Y-rings, understand you expected get the plate already completed and you didn't order it?
If it fits to the feeders then only lenght and width I need, specialy length.
Pls take dimensions when you will be at machine. Easy, I know it's Sunday today ;).
The plate need to be 16.0mm thick and a lot of plates have ben
exchanged at no cost because real juki feeder cannot be mounted. I m
not surprised to see this 15-18mm plates
selling on some sites that was exchanged or was in stock at warehous before
switching to correct plate thickness.
Yamaha Feeder plates must be 16.0 mm thick at least at the inside
edge, 15mm deep.
>Cri I'm little confused with your information. So the plate for original feeders must have >thickness 16mm at the edge closer to parts picking?
Yes 16.0 mm, and this for 15mm depht.
What about the thickness at the opposite edge?
it don't matter as long it is not too thinn.
Look at the feeder,picture.
http://web.tradekorea.com/upload_file2/sell/69/S00044769/Yamaha_SS_CL_FV_feeder.JPG
>Cri I'm little confused with your information. So the plate for original feeders must have >thickness 16mm at the edge closer to parts picking?
Yes 16.0 mm, and this for 15mm depht.
Great Bernd, thanks!
(class II accuracy good enough for my purpose ;) )
I don't have this block but plan to build or buy some. Haven't decided yet if take robotdigg or some more closer to original (or used). But I've that feeder and played with him.
I imagine that the only sealing (x-ring) should be placed under this long slat.
If you take a look on the air pin of the feeder you'll find there one small hole at one side. When I've applied there an air from my compressor the tape was actuated as should do.
By the way, could you tell me if the hole for airpin and the hole where is mounted the air pipe connector are drilled axially? Appreciated if you could take some photo showing an inside of the air holes (when the covering bar is taken off).
On Oct 8, 2017, at 5:40 AM, Bernd Walter <be...@bwct.de> wrote:
>
> Hope to get some matching O-rings next week, while waiting for delivery of the Y-rings.
> Couldn't source the proper Y-rings locally.
Does anybody know where I can find some diagrams showing how to install the seals?
I ordered one of the Robotdigg Yamaha-pneumatic-feeder mounting blocks, and everything fits together quite nicely, but I can't for the life of me figure out how to properly seal the joint between the feeder and the base.
If I understand correctly (I have a huge pile of these feeders but have never seen one in pneumatic operation) the rear mounting peg (i.e. the one farther from the pick and place head) has a tiny hole in it. Compressed air enters through that hole, flows through the machined aluminum block into the black tube, and from there to the pneumatic actuator.
Is the O-ring supposed to go underneath the smaller plate component of the base, or be wrapped around the peg, or in both positions? Tried a lot of things, still got leaks and no feeder actuation.
I was pretty skeptical about the whole pneumatic-actuation thing from the start, had planned on converting the feeders to use cheap motors instead, but figured I'd give the pneumatics one last chance.
Also there appear to be two screws on the machine aluminum block part of the feeder, do I need to set and/or tune those? Not sure what they do.
Thanks,
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "OpenPnP" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to openpnp+u...@googlegroups.com.
To post to this group, send email to ope...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/openpnp/e3a7c46d-87b1-4e8f-b5b6-b13583ac4b8c%40googlegroups.com.
Could anybody explain me how an air in the plate is supplied to feeder if the small hole for air is located at the side surface of the feeder pin not centrally at his bottom? Is there some side channel in the plate to deliver an air, or just the main hole for the pin has higher diameter than the pin 6mm and air is blowing from bottom not from some side channel?
That's why I've asked if air connector is mounted axially with the pin or not.
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "OpenPnP" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to openpnp+u...@googlegroups.com.
To post to this group, send email to ope...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/openpnp/6db15e0a-2c64-4b3b-997f-631b12ecd539%40googlegroups.com.
On Oct 29, 2017, at 5:16 AM, Marek T. <marek.tw...@gmail.com> wrote:
> By the way, could you tell me if the hole for airpin and the hole where is mounted the air pipe connector are drilled axially? Appreciated if you could take some photo showing an inside of the air holes (when the covering bar is taken off).
Okay hope these help and that google doesn't excommunicate me for the heinous sin of emailing images to a mailing list...
I circled the air entry hole because it didn't turn out as visible in the photo as I thought.
By the way my block was painted black which I didn't expect; I don't mind though. I think I was one of the first people to order one, they probably had trouble with the finish on the first run or something.
First photo shows where I put an o-ring on the feeder pin itself; last photo shows where I put one inside the block. I have also tried each o-ring by itself without the other one and no o-rings at all. All four configurations lead to lots of air escaping all over the place and no feeder actuation.
https://youtu.be/nBnfRhdnPksI activate the feeder twice, because the parts have 8mm spacing with the feeder doing 4mm.
Jason thanks for pics offer but that from Lamont seems be enough. And just this wanted to know that hole dia is wider than pin. I'll make later some drawing to you could confirm me (or deny) that it's like I think. Thanks!
On Oct 29, 2017, at 10:00 AM, Bernd Walter <be...@bwct.de> wrote:
> The best thing is to get the proper Y-ring sold by Robotdigg.
> They work very well in the block.
> The Y-Rings are standard, but I couldn't find any other source, so I had to wait for Robotdigg to deliver.
> The Y side goes below to the pressure source.
> But you can also just use something else - I'd cut some rubber sheet in the meantime.
Any chance you could post a close-up photo of what the Y-ring looks like? Robotdigg's site only shows the X-ring, and frankly I can't see how it's any different from an O-ring.
Even better if you could post a closeup of it sitting in the feeder block. At least then I'd have an idea of what to aim for.
I do have a graphtec cutter and rubber sheets that fit through it, so in a pinch...
When I ordered the feeder block the order page didn't say anything about the rings. I see they've now included one line. Wish they'd post a photo showing what it looks like installed, which ought to convey which gap it helps seal.
> As said above, with the Y-side, the side with 2 lips, to the bottom and the single lip side to the top.
Gah, sorry, I cannot envision this. I guess I need to see what a Y-ring looks like to make sense of it.
> You need a standard pressure of 6-8 bar.
> Don't try with 3bar airbrush compressor - it is not enough.
Yeah I'm using a 25-gallon shop air compressor. Normally set to 120psi (=8.2bar) but never got it up that high with the feeder because the massive air leaks were obvious at even half that pressure.
> Also there appear to be two screws on the machine aluminum block part of the feeder, do I need to set and/or tune those? Not sure what they do.
>
> Not sure which screws you mean.
> The smaller plate should be screwed with all screws to the base plate.
> In my case only one matching screw was supplied.
No no, on the feeder, not the plate. Not visible in the photo below but the arrow points at it (can take another if you want). I think the other adjustment-looking screw is on the bottom side of the feeder as it lies in the photo.
(And yes I'm aware the actuator is disconnected in these photos -- after I couldn't get the feeder working I disconnected it to try to operate it directly off of the compressor, then realized I lacked the adapters to do that).
Hey thanks again for your advice on the feeder plate!
On Oct 29, 2017, at 2:12 PM, Bernd Walter <be...@bwct.de> wrote:
> https://youtu.be/nBnfRhdnPks
That's a very nice tooling plate you've got there, the (steel?) plate with regularly spaced holes in it. Did you have it custom CNC'd or is there a source for those?
I had a similar plate made as a stencil tooling block, but the job cost enough that I'm trying not to go that route again unless necessary.
Also what is the name (in general, generically) for that device made of white 3D-printed plastic in your videos? I know the commercial pick-and-places (and stencil printers too) have metal widgets that look like that but I don't even know the name for that thing so it's hard to even start looking for them.
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "OpenPnP" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to openpnp+u...@googlegroups.com.
To post to this group, send email to ope...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/openpnp/96C47A38-30CD-4ECF-9EA9-484AA86E2A5F%40gmail.com.
Only takes 90 psi for me and that is a quick, strong actuation. Perhaps yours need lubrication or something?
Ok Friends, thanks for dimensions and information. Bernd, clear for me, If I'd mount all that 30 screws also not happy to disassemble it for you ;-).
So I've drawn a piece of plate to get final info how it is done. Indulgence please, it's not some professional technical drawing but done in real scale.
Pls see attached picture, left or right version? And should I understand that the pin is kept in center only through the gum, correct?
Now have found that Robotdigg says on their site with the board about "Y-ring 6*9*2.1" and gives a link to X-ring 10.78x2.62...
I have here good supplier with different sealings (manufacturer), no problem with this they find me good profile and size.
The drawing is ok now?
Hi Bernd
Have two more questions. Not troubling I hope :-)
1. an air sealing, this o-ring or y-ring. Is it squeezed by the top covering plate to the main board, or there is some gap between oring and plates? Don't need to you measure it. I'm making a draw for some CNC and need to know how to design it.
2. valves. I have searched over few catalogues of valve manufaturers but can't find how they are connected to the delivered air (to compressor). As I thing an air from compressor is connected to the one, first, valve only and passes through him to the next valve and so on. And searching to know how the valves are connected and sealed each other. I don't believe that an air from compressor is divided into 20, 30 or more ways and connected separately to each valve. How it is?
Thanks, let me know when you have time to check it, thanks.
I need many 8mm feeders. So need many valves. My board will be for 40 slots or 35 slots. Each slot more important for me. Asked Robotdigg too make me that board but customized production costs them a lot and got price for that like $300. So I'll do it here much cheaper.
Valves V1 like you have are 23mm width but may be easy connected by touching their sides and orings between them. V200 valves are 17mm so better for me about place but require special manifold. Manifolds for them are for max 10 valves. So also must make some long manifold for them because don't want to connect 3-4 manifolds. Some problem wherever I touch :-).
It makes sense what you say about the oring gap. My oring provider told me to make the socket diameter wider and higher 0.2mm. It's ok about higher but probably not acceptable about the wider diameter as will just not seal at outer surface then. One of the sizes must be tight. That's why asked you for this info.I need many 8mm feeders. So need many valves. My board will be for 40 slots or 35 slots. Each slot more important for me. Asked Robotdigg too make me that board but customized production costs them a lot and got price for that like $300. So I'll do it here much cheaper.
I do not have CAD models but the pick point on the CL feeders is just in front of the first alignment pin, hence I would design your nozzles and camera to extend to just beyond the first alignment pin.The pick height is ~65mm above the top of the plate.