Electronics Forum | Tue Aug 13 10:08:44 EDT 2002 | dougt
Tony, I'm in Ken's corner.....the speeds the manufacturers offer are pretty much meaningless when it comes down to your particular board. Brand X can say they will do 1,000,000 cph but when you put your board on the machine with multiple parts at di
Electronics Forum | Mon Aug 12 14:47:01 EDT 2002 | soupatech
Hi, Does anyone know the aprox. parts per hour a cp3 and ip2 should place assuming the program is optimized and everything else goes well (yeah right!)? I understand there are a lot of factors involved to get the correct numbers but what is the BEST
Electronics Forum | Tue Aug 13 13:34:39 EDT 2002 | soupatech
Thanks for all the input everyone..... At least I have a starting point and have something to compare my actual numbers with. It seems to me the most important thing to worry about is feeders and writing the program correctly. I have spent most of my
Electronics Forum | Mon Aug 12 18:51:42 EDT 2002 | russ
The "BEST" thsat they could do is what is in the manual. BUT we all know that no-one that I know of designs boards with only 0805 on .100" centers with one component. CP 3 should give you on average maybe 10k per hour. IP 2 I really don't know sin
Electronics Forum | Tue Aug 13 01:53:19 EDT 2002 | kenbliss
Hey Tony Although clearly everyone so far on this forum agrees that there is no real number in real life and virtual life is well....useless. The reality is that what you are really after is maximizing uptime, meaning, look closely at every event t
Electronics Forum | Mon Aug 12 18:26:05 EDT 2002 | pjc
If you are talking actual placement rate- from first fiducial read of board no. 1 to first fiducial read of board no. 2, here is the best I've ever seen based on the boards I've run: CP3- 141 seconds for 468 components per board (all rectangular chi
Electronics Forum | Tue Mar 26 05:26:30 EDT 2019 | directx995
Yes there is, just tell me the model of your machine since GSM is platform?
Electronics Forum | Thu Mar 21 15:52:37 EDT 2019 | Seth
Is there any way you can change the speed of how fast the head moves when placing a part?
Electronics Forum | Wed Mar 27 09:57:08 EDT 2019 | dilogic
Yes, you can. However, if you go above designed, limits you might either break something or it won't operate as you expect. There are settings for each servo loop on the machine and you can play with acceleration, speeds etc. Not sure that it's smart
Electronics Forum | Fri Apr 05 18:33:31 EDT 2019 | ttheis
I am also interested in this but to slow one of our machines down- it stops too quickly and shakes the machine more than I would like. We are running GSM1's on OS/2 and uic sw 3.3.