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Sherlock Ohms

Case of the Failing 'C' Batteries

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Ann R. Thryft
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Blogger
Re: Fix the Process and not the Part
Ann R. Thryft   5/8/2012 7:19:38 PM
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This Sherlock reminds me of some things I heard when reporting on machine vision and inspection equipment. Mainly, how do you tell when the test/inspection equipment is the cause of a failure, and not the part? The big automated production and assembly systems have the ability to gather data, via software, which can be aided by the use of machine vision, to allow just that. But it all has to be configured correctly, and that takes a lot of time and energy. I heard from MV vendors that often that doesn't get done.


William K.
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Platinum
Case of the failing c cells.
William K.   5/17/2012 9:27:32 PM
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I have designed a lot of industrial testing machines and one common feature on many of them was code to detect three-in-a-row failures at any test position. That would either set a warning flag or stop the machine, since the processes were stable enough to make 3 in a row faults be a warning about some kind of process deviation problem. Of course if the tester did not record which fixture position the faults were in then it would never have spotted the problem. 

But it was certainly good detective work to locate the cause.

tekochip
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Platinum
Re: Case of the failing c cells.
tekochip   5/18/2012 10:17:29 AM
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Collecting stats on which position failed is a great idea William.

William K.
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Platinum
Re: Case of the failing c cells.
William K.   5/18/2012 3:02:45 PM
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Monitoring failures for each test position is usually mandatory for quite a few organizations. Others just monitor for three in a row on the whole machine. The reason is that in an automated line there could be a test fixture failure and it could result in a shift's worth of rejects when there was nothing wrong with the parts. So it is very good economics.

Cadman-LT
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Gold
Seems Obvious
Cadman-LT   5/20/2012 8:30:06 PM
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Your solution seems so obvious, yet if there is no one there to explore the problem people just believe the machine they are told to I suppose.

Cadman-LT
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Gold
Charger
Cadman-LT   5/20/2012 8:32:04 PM
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I have a battery charger that sometimes says my batteries are fried and sometimes they get the green light. I'd like to know why that happens.

Cadman-LT
User Rank
Gold
Re: Charger
Cadman-LT   5/20/2012 8:53:43 PM
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Actually I have 2 chargers. One will say yes and no depending on the day, and the other always says yes(green light). It's very annoying and I wish I had an answer as to why this happens. Either way, the batteries work...I just never am sure to trust if they are fully charged or not. I am about to just get all new batteries and if the chargers say bad...toss the charger.

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