Invertible and adjustable tray
An invertible tray for components on a strip is disclosed. A stack of trays can be manipulated to invert the orientation of its contents with minimum disturbance to the component strips. In addition, the tray includes adjustable rails for accommodating component strips of various dimensions.
The present invention relates to an adjustable tray for handling a plurality of hard disk drive heads in two different orientations. The invention is designed for handling partial or complete HDD heads, hereinafter referred to as suspension assemblies.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONAn HDD suspension assembly is a fragile part that comprises a triangular-shaped portion, a base, a suspension arm and at least one magnetic read/write head. A flexible circuit is attached to the forward portion of the assembly. HDD suspensions are generally fabricated in groups of five or ten suspensions per strip, and then singulated before shipping. During the fabrication process it is necessary to access the suspensions on the top and bottom side of each tray. Currently, HDD suspensions must be manually removed from the tray for inspection, inverted and then placed back into the tray during processing. Suspensions that are manually inverted are susceptible to damage. Merely inverting a tray can introduce substantial contaminants into a stack of trays if the tray contents are dropped down into a receiving tray of a stack. Therefore, a need exists for an invertible tray that does not introduce contaminants due to vertical movement of the contents when the tray is manipulated.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention concerns an apparatus for handling a strip having components thereon (herein component strip or simply strip). The apparatus includes a first tray having a first side with protrusions adapted to retain a component strip in a first orientation. In addition, the apparatus includes a second tray having a second side which has protrusions adapted to retain a component strip in a second orientation. The first side of the first tray is adapted to engage the second side of the second tray such that, when the trays are inverted, the strip is transferred from the first tray to the second tray and becomes supported in a new orientation by protrusions on the second tray.
In another embodiment the invention is directed to a stack of trays having a top surface and a bottom surface, each surface being useable for handling a plurality of suspension assemblies. Each tray in the stack has alignment bars, a locating rail and a retention rail. The suspension assemblies are held in a first orientation by at least one protrusion extending from the locating rail on one of the trays. The suspension assemblies are inverted by manipulating the stack so that the openings on the plurality of suspension assemblies rest on at least one protrusion extending from a second tray. The suspension assemblies are captured by the retention rails and the protrusions between the two trays. As a result, the suspension assemblies are accessible for inspection from either the top or bottom surface of the stack. In yet another embodiment, the invention is directed to a tray that is both invertible and adjustable.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The present invention is designed to facilitate the handling of components that are on a strip. Specifically, the tray can handle strips during different processing stages. The invention will be described in reference to HDD suspensions attached to a strip. However, the invention can apply to any other type of articles that are progressively built on a strip of material, with additional elements being added to the strip in each successive manufacturing stage.
In reference to
As shown in
Tray 20 can handle component strip of various dimensions by adjusting locating rail 25 and retention rails 35 along alignment bars 32, 34 and alignment bars 42, 44. In order to properly capture components between abutting trays, it is preferable that each locating rail and retention rail in a first tray have a similar position as in a second tray that abuts the first tray. Retention rails 35 and protrusions 22 support the component strip in a desired position in the tray stack.
Each tray may optionally include two or more feet 26 extending from the bottom surface. Feet 26 prevent the trays from accumulating contaminants and protect the fragility of the protrusions 22 as well. When present, feet 26 have dimensions that do not interfere with any of the tray features on the top and bottom profiles of the present invention.
The manner in which the contents of a tray are inverted will now be discussed.
A partial exploded view of a suspension strip 100 between two trays is shown in
The miniscule clearance 75 between retention rails 35 of each tray allows suspension strip 100 to be reoriented with minimal movement when a stack of trays is inverted. As a result of inverting the tray stack, the suspension strip is transferred with minimal movement to an abutting tray and reoriented to an orientation reverse from the orientation before inversion.
The present invention is fabricated from traditional methods of injection molding. The present invention can be fabricated from conductive, thermoplastic, non-conductive, and insulated plastic. In addition, the trays of this invention can be fabricated from material that has electrostatic dissipating properties.
The examples described herein are solely representative of the present invention. It is understood that various modifications and substitutions may be made to the foregoing examples without departing from either the spirit or scope of the invention. In some instances certain features of the invention wit[ be employed without other features depending on the particular situation encountered by the ordinary person skilled in the art. Moreover the trays are not restricted to handling solely strips having five suspension assemblies, but can hold more or fewer assemblies on a strip, as well as a plurality of strips within the same tray. It is therefore the intent that the invention not be limited to the particular examples disclosed herein.
Claims
1. An apparatus for handling a strip of components comprising:
- a first tray having a first side which has protrusions extending perpendicularly therefrom, adapted to retain the strip in a first orientation;
- a second tray having a second side which has protrusions extending perpendicularly therefrom, adapted to retain the strip in a second orientation;
- the first side of the first tray is adapted to engage the second side of the second tray such that, when the trays are inverted, the strip between the first and second tray transfers from being supported by protrusions on one of the trays to being supported by the protrusions on the other of the trays and the orientation of the strip is reversed.
2. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the strip has a plurality of openings, a portion of said openings are received by the protrusions on the first side of the first tray in a first orientation, and a portion of said openings are received by the protrusions on the second side of the second tray in another orientation reverse from the first orientation.
3. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the openings received by the first tray are different than the openings received by the second tray.
4. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the first tray and the second tray are adapted to nest with each other.
5. The apparatus of claim 1, further comprising a plurality of Locating rails provided on each of the trays.
6. The apparatus of claim 5, wherein the protrusions extend from a locating rail on a first side of the first tray and wherein the second side of the second tray has apertures on a locating rail, the apertures on the second tray receive the protrusions from the first tray when the first and second trays nest together.
7. The apparatus of claim 5, wherein each of the trays has both a first side and a second side located opposite the first side, the first and second sides each having protrusions and apertures on their respective locating rails.
8. The apparatus of claim 5, wherein the locating rail may have a linear, serpentine, or sinusoidal configuration.
9. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the protrusions are provided with a conical, hemispherical, rectangular, or hexagonal shape.
10. The apparatus of claim 1, further comprising retention rails for capturing strips of varying dimensions between the first and second trays.
11. The apparatus of claim 5, further comprising retention rails for capturing strips of varying dimensions between the first and second trays.
12. The apparatus of claim 10, wherein the retention rails and the locating rails are adjustable.
13. The apparatus of claim 12, wherein the retention rails and the locating rails are adjustable along a plurality of alignment bars, and at least one of the alignment bars has a notched surface.
14. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein said components comprise a partial or complete suspension assembly for a hard disk drive.
15. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein said trays are formed from an insulating, static dissipating or electrically conductive material.
16. A stack of trays having a top surface and a bottom surface, said surfaces being useable for handling a plurality of suspension assemblies, the stack of trays comprising:
- a first and a second tray each having alignment bars, a locating rail and a retention rail;
- a plurality of suspension assemblies each having an opening along a periphery;
- a portion of the openings of the suspension assemblies being received in a first orientation by at least one protrusion extending from the locating rail on a first tray;
- wherein the plurality of suspension assemblies are transferred to the second tray to have a second orientation by manipulating the stack so that the openings on the plurality of suspension assemblies rest on at least one protrusion of the second tray.
17. The stack of trays of claim 16, wherein the suspension assemblies are accessible for inspection from either the top or bottom surface of the stack.
18. A stack of trays of claim 16, wherein the plurality of suspension assemblies are captured by the retention rails and locating rails between the two trays.
19. The stack of trays of claim 16, wherein the locating rails and the retention rails are adjustable.
20. The stack of trays of claim 16, wherein the locating rail and the retention rail are adjustable along the alignment bars, and at least one of the alignment bars has a notched surface.
Type: Application
Filed: Aug 19, 2004
Publication Date: Apr 6, 2006
Inventors: Scott Bradley (Carlsbad, CA), James Pylant (Temecula, CA)
Application Number: 10/923,147
International Classification: B65D 77/00 (20060101);