1. Automated Life-Cycle Testing for Consumer Electronics Buttons
Used in quality assurance rigs to simulate repeated finger presses on smartphone side-buttons, remote controls, or medical device interfaces. The cylinder is mounted in a dense array to test multiple devices simultaneously.
Problem SolvedReplaces manual testing with a high-speed, consistent mechanical actuation that mimics human finger pressure (approx. 1.4 kgf) without applying excessive force that could damage delicate micro-switches.
14N theoretical forceSingle-acting pushing5mm strokeCartridge mounting
2. Microfluidic Chip Clamping in IVD (In-Vitro Diagnostic) Analyzers
Integrated directly into the manifold block of Point-of-Care (POC) medical devices to securely hold disposable microfluidic chips or slides against optical sensors during analysis.
Problem SolvedProvides a precise, low-force clamping action that ensures a proper seal for optical reading without cracking fragile glass/plastic chips, utilizing the compact screw-in cartridge design to save valuable internal instrument space.
6mm piston diameterISO 8573-1:2010 operating mediumCRC 2 corrosion resistanceNickel-plated brass housing
3. PCB Datum Banking in Optical Inspection Machines
Acts as a lateral pusher in Automated Optical Inspection (AOI) conveyors to gently nudge small Printed Circuit Boards (PCBs) against a hard stop (datum) for precise alignment before the camera captures images.
Problem SolvedEliminates positional errors in vision systems by ensuring repeatable board placement. The single-acting spring return ensures the path is automatically cleared for the next board in case of air failure.
Spring returnCompact footprintOperating pressure 2-8 barM3 pneumatic connection