Gears4brains
Mechanical
- Nov 8, 2002
- 2
I'm an intern for a company that makes fasteners and other automotive parts such as ball studs for automobiles. I just recently had to design an adjustable feed rail that carries parts from a hopper down into the machine. There is a drop of about three feet over a distance of about four feet. At the top ball studs are fed into a 2 1/4" piece of conduit. At the end of the tube the parts drop into two parallel rails where they hang by thier head and slide into the machine. The problem is that the drop is too much. the parts fly too fast and don't fall into the rail right. If the parts are moving slow enough they fall in perfectly. I've tried everything from rubber strips in the tube to roughing up the inner surface by sand blasting to slow the parts down. On the other hand they can't go to slow or they will stop. I can't change the drop or the distance. Any ideas would be help I'm stumped. Thanks ME intern for 4 years. addicted to anything mechanical! Car nut.