MAC3382
Industrial
- May 21, 2006
- 33
Hello, All:
I hope that this is the appropriate forum for this question.
I have a job in-house which requires quantifying the break-away force of a magnet assembly (~ 6 N +/- 2%) through an air-gap with a tolernace of +/- 0.015mm. The magnet attracts to a precision work-piece of a specific alloy.
To date we have a motorized test stand, a 10N transducer, a linear bearing guided jig, and various methods of "fixturing" the magnet.
The problem is that the fixturing of the magnet corrupts the measurment. The system/method will not pass a gage R&R because it is wholly dependent upon the operator. (We have tried clamps, clips, carriages, etc.)
We have also had a XY knife edge coupler built for a near frictionless coupling. The thought was the compliance in the coupler would account for the minute mis-aligmnets and symetry issues, but the compliance in the coupler actually exacerbated the problems. (Any break-down in teh geometry symetry would cause an unbalanced force condition and the magnet field would establish force compenents to futher skew the system.
Instead of compressing a material to act as an airgap and pulling the magnet away, we would like to suspend the magnet a set distance (0.5mm) above the work-piece. The work-piece would be connected to a lab grade scale. (Common scales are at least an order of magnetude btter than a commercial load-cell) The problem is that, like the load-cell in our transducer, the scale works on displacement. So, the airgap is reduced and the reading is incorrect. we have tested several Acculab and metler scales and found as much a 0.010" of deflection for our target mass/gf.
Finally the question:
I have found some literature for a type of scale style that uses "Forced Restoration Field" or magnetic compensation to return the "pan" back to the initial equilibrium position. I have. however; not found this to be common and most scale manufacturers have no working knowledge of this. I have a Technical datasheet from metler on this subject, but it is from 1985.
Does anyone have any knowldge on this style loadcell? I would appreciate any and all leads.
thanks,
Mac
I hope that this is the appropriate forum for this question.
I have a job in-house which requires quantifying the break-away force of a magnet assembly (~ 6 N +/- 2%) through an air-gap with a tolernace of +/- 0.015mm. The magnet attracts to a precision work-piece of a specific alloy.
To date we have a motorized test stand, a 10N transducer, a linear bearing guided jig, and various methods of "fixturing" the magnet.
The problem is that the fixturing of the magnet corrupts the measurment. The system/method will not pass a gage R&R because it is wholly dependent upon the operator. (We have tried clamps, clips, carriages, etc.)
We have also had a XY knife edge coupler built for a near frictionless coupling. The thought was the compliance in the coupler would account for the minute mis-aligmnets and symetry issues, but the compliance in the coupler actually exacerbated the problems. (Any break-down in teh geometry symetry would cause an unbalanced force condition and the magnet field would establish force compenents to futher skew the system.
Instead of compressing a material to act as an airgap and pulling the magnet away, we would like to suspend the magnet a set distance (0.5mm) above the work-piece. The work-piece would be connected to a lab grade scale. (Common scales are at least an order of magnetude btter than a commercial load-cell) The problem is that, like the load-cell in our transducer, the scale works on displacement. So, the airgap is reduced and the reading is incorrect. we have tested several Acculab and metler scales and found as much a 0.010" of deflection for our target mass/gf.
Finally the question:
I have found some literature for a type of scale style that uses "Forced Restoration Field" or magnetic compensation to return the "pan" back to the initial equilibrium position. I have. however; not found this to be common and most scale manufacturers have no working knowledge of this. I have a Technical datasheet from metler on this subject, but it is from 1985.
Does anyone have any knowldge on this style loadcell? I would appreciate any and all leads.
thanks,
Mac