tallan
Computer
- Oct 23, 2012
- 2
I work with business who deal in millions of loose-leaf baseball cards. They currently pay hundreds of thousands of dollars each year to have part time workers count & sort these cards for resale at locations across the US.
With recent advances in OCR technology and mass-market scanning products (like business-card readers and cash-counting machines) I am searching for an already-existing solution that can be modified for this task rather than spending $500,000 for all-new custom manufacturing.
The two biggest problem areas (mechanical) seem to be:
1) Condition sensitive: If a machine is going to 'grab' a card repeatedly to read/sort/place it, how to minimize damage; as even the slightest scratch on a card can sometimes drop value by $1000+
2) The (geometrical) sorting bin/shelf concept. i.e. once a card is identified, how to most-effiently 'put it away' amongst a million other already pre-sorted cards. Should there be 'rows of cards' in 100ft-long bins and a machine hand runs along the top picking & pulling? Or should the cards be kept in shorter bin/drawers, like a card-catalog in a library? and so on. And finally, when cards are all stacked up in a row together, they are difficult to 'pull' out, i.e. to pull out just one card without pulling (or damaging) its neighbors.
Also chain-linking (via usb or similar) several smaller machines together may have efficiency gains over a single massive machine. Undoubtedly the smaller the machine the better.
This task already has a budget set aside for it, so any ideas feel free to contact me directly, whether individual engineer or full corporate. I would especially be interested in hearing from anyone who has already built similar machines (xerox copiers, coupon sorters etc).
With recent advances in OCR technology and mass-market scanning products (like business-card readers and cash-counting machines) I am searching for an already-existing solution that can be modified for this task rather than spending $500,000 for all-new custom manufacturing.
The two biggest problem areas (mechanical) seem to be:
1) Condition sensitive: If a machine is going to 'grab' a card repeatedly to read/sort/place it, how to minimize damage; as even the slightest scratch on a card can sometimes drop value by $1000+
2) The (geometrical) sorting bin/shelf concept. i.e. once a card is identified, how to most-effiently 'put it away' amongst a million other already pre-sorted cards. Should there be 'rows of cards' in 100ft-long bins and a machine hand runs along the top picking & pulling? Or should the cards be kept in shorter bin/drawers, like a card-catalog in a library? and so on. And finally, when cards are all stacked up in a row together, they are difficult to 'pull' out, i.e. to pull out just one card without pulling (or damaging) its neighbors.
Also chain-linking (via usb or similar) several smaller machines together may have efficiency gains over a single massive machine. Undoubtedly the smaller the machine the better.
This task already has a budget set aside for it, so any ideas feel free to contact me directly, whether individual engineer or full corporate. I would especially be interested in hearing from anyone who has already built similar machines (xerox copiers, coupon sorters etc).