Tapemark Engineer Tim Brown discusses the 'handshake' between the converting and packaging processes. Our converting machines are able to change the pitch, reject the bad parts, verify that rejection, control it in the reject stage, and stack passed parts for packaging.
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Transcript:
Hi, Tim Brown again with the Tapemark company. I just wanted to take a couple seconds out of your day and kind of show you a handshake between our converting process and our packaging process. Packaging is sometimes overlooked by our customers and it's more of a second thought and we had Tapemark kind of think it's sometimes more important than even creating the part.
So, what you see in front of you is within four and a half feet, we are actually from the sheeter dye changing the pitch, rejecting a bad part, reject verification of that part, controlling it out of a reject gate, and we're stacking it for a second packaging. Now what that means to everyone is created in a modular design again, it's able to adapt to different sizes, and when it comes to speed and overall repeatability of the pieces of equipment, we have to be able to verify each step that we do and within four and a half feet we've accomplished that.
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