I've seen a lot of PnPs that do this. Usually they have what looks like an upside-down pencil attached to the head, in addition to the needle. The eraser part of the upside-down pencil does the paper-dragging in order to not put stress on the pickup needle (which can bend it, influencing accuracy).mpbrock wrote: My friend has one of these NeoDen TM-240A - i was watching it yesterday - (some videos of it in use on Youtube) - it has quite a novel way of advancing the tape from the feeders - no motors - a needle comes down from the PnP head above where the holes in the tape are, and then it drags some more tape out from the reel, before the needle retracts and it then picks up the components.
But honestly, all this feeder nonsense is strictly for ultimate speed, which is something the liteplacer is not meant for. The liteplacer is never going to win speed competitions, so why fool around with complicated mechanisms whose only purpose is speed?
I've gone totally feederless now... just rip the tape off a dozen meters worth of components, spill them onto the table, and let the vision system sort them into nice rows on gel-pak substrate overnight. Many added bonuses -- you can close up the gel-pak box and swap them in/out MUCH more easily than any tape+feeder system, virtually unlimited number of different components, QR codes to identify gel-pak boxes, place the frequently-used components right next to the work, etc, etc. Of course you need to be using better vision than the Hough Circle Detector for this... OpenCV's MSER plus minimum-bounding-rectangle is really really fast and recognizes all sizes of SMT passives flawlessly using the Andonstar cam; just give it upper/lower bounds on the area and aspect ratio of the component you're interested in. FireSight really opened my eyes to what's possible with good vision.
Feeders are a waste of time for this machine, IMHO. Think out of the box (or reel)!