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Choose the Right Insert Machine

by admin on 2026-6-1

How to Choose the Right DIP Plug-In Machine

For many SMT managers, the “DIP side” remains a bottleneck. While surface mount technology gets faster, through-hole components (connectors, transformers, electrolytic caps) are still essential. Choosing the wrong DIP plug-in machine leads to high defect rates, damaged components, and wasted labor.

Here is a practical guide to selecting the right through-hole insertion equipment based on machine type, true cost of ownership, and real-world usage scenarios.

1. First, Identify Your Component Mix

Before comparing prices, analyze your PCB. DIP components fall into two categories:

  • Axial Components (resistors, diodes): Leads exit from both ends of the body.

  • Radial Components (capacitors, LEDs, transistors): Both leads exit from the same side.

  • Odd-Form Components (fuses, connectors, relays, transformers): Non-standard shapes that cannot be handled by standard feeders.

The Rule: If 80% of your components are standard axial/radial, a dedicated high-speed inserter works. If you see many odd-forms, you need a flexible or manual selective insertion solution.

2. Types of Insert Machines (Pros & Cons)

Here is the breakdown of three mainstream equipment levels:

A. High-Speed Radial/Axial Inserter

  • How it works: Components are taped and reeled. The machine cuts, forms leads, and inserts at 10,000–20,000 CPH.

  • Best for: Mass production of consumer electronics (power supplies, LED lighting).

  • Weakness: Cannot handle odd-forms; expensive tooling per component type.

B. Selective/Sequential Insertion Machine

  • How it works: Single head picks components from various feeders (tube, tray, or bulk) and inserts them one by one.

  • Best for: Mid-mix production (industrial controls, automotive).

  • Weakness: Slower (2,000–5,000 CPH), but highly flexible.

C. Semi-Automatic / Manual Insertion Workstation (Laser Guide)

  • How it works: A laser projector shows the operator exactly where to insert each component.

  • Best for: Prototyping, heavy odd-forms, or low-volume high-mix.

  • Weakness: Dependent on human speed; no throughput for high-volume runs.

3. The True Cost Analysis (Don’t Look Only at Sticker Price)

When budgeting, experienced operations managers calculate Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) over 5 years. Consider three factors:

  • Acquisition Cost: A high-speed inserter costs $80k–$150k. A selective inserter costs $40k–$90k. A semi-auto laser guide costs $8k–$15k.

  • Feeder Cost: Hidden danger! A machine might be cheap, but feeders cost $200–$800 each. For 50 component types, feeder investment can exceed the machine price.

  • Defect Cost: Mis-insertions crush components or damage PCB pads. A machine with centering claws (vs. simple jaws) reduces rework by 40%. Rework labor kills profits.

Rule of Thumb: Calculate your annual labor cost for manual DIP insertion. If it exceeds $50,000, an automatic inserter pays back in <18 months.

4. Match Machine to Your Exact Scenario

Your Scenario Recommended Machine Why?
High-volume consumer PCBs (1M+ units/year, few component changes) High-speed radial/axial inserter Maximize UPH; your feeders stay fixed.
Industrial/Automotive (5k–50k units/year, frequent design changes) Selective insertion machine Quick changeover; handles different lead lengths.
R&D / Prototype / Repair (Any volume, high odd-forms) Semi-auto laser guided workstation Zero tooling cost; no feeder purchase.
Mixed assembly with large transformers or relays Manual insertion + Selective machine Let the machine do small caps; humans place heavy transformers.

5. Three Technical Features You Cannot Ignore

When evaluating vendors (including our own equipment), physically ask for these demonstrations:

  1. Lead Clinching: Does the machine bend leads outward after insertion? Without clinching, components fall out during wave soldering.

  2. Component Height Sensor: If a part is missing from the tape, will the machine stop or skip? Cheap machines insert air – causing tombstoning.

  3. Feed Angle Adjustment: Can the machine handle tape pitches of 2.5mm, 5.0mm, and 7.5mm without changing hardware?

Conclusion: Start with Your Top 5 Problem Components

Do not buy a machine based on brochures. Pull your five most frequently damaged through-hole parts (e.g., a tight-pitch connector or a fragile LED). Ask the supplier to run a sample batch on your actual PCB.

At CRTech , we provide both high-speed and selective DIP insertion systems. We also offer free throughput analysis: send us your annual production volume and PCB files, and we will recommend the exact configuration that minimizes your cost per insertion.



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