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19: Engineering Design Assistance
Gripper Basics
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Parallel gripper
The jaws movement is on a straight line.
Angular gripper
The jaws are pivoted and move on an
angular line with a 10° – 40° angle.
Three jaws gripper
Is generally used to handle loads of cylindrical
shapes, maintaing the same axis, even if
different diameter parts are being gripped.
Radial gripper
The jaws move on an angular line with a 90° angle;
because of this the moving back can be avoided ANGULAR GRIPPER RADIAL GRIPPER
in order to withdraw the gripping tools from the
working plane.
Self-centering
Engineering & Reference
On the pneumatic gripper generally the jaws are symmetrically
moved, and because of this, the load is centered.
SELF-CENTERING STARTING NOT SELF-CENTERING
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19: Engineering Design Assistance
Gripper Basics
Call our EOAT Engineering Department for Sizing Assistance
Gripping force
They must be built as short and light as possible, to reach the
maximum gripping force, keeping the inertia to a minimum.
EXTERNAL GRIPPING INTERNAL GRIPPING INTERNAL - EXTERNAL GRIPPING
POSITIVE GRIPPING FORCE GRIPPING
RUBBER FLOATING HEAD
Engineering & Reference
POSITIVE GRIPPING 3 POINT GRIPPING WITH 2 JAWS 3 POINT GRIPPING WITH 3 JAWS
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19: Engineering Design Assistance
Gripper Calculation Example
Call our EOAT Engineering Department for Sizing Assistance
Calculation example:
A 1kg load is to handle as in the figure with a coefficient of friction µ = 0.1.
The gripper, Gimatic MG-0050, moves upward with acceleration a=4m/s2.
Verify that the safety factor is at least ŋ=1.5
m = mass
g = acceleration of gravity
a = acceleration of handling
µ = coefficient of friction
η = safety factor
m= 1 kg
g= 9.8 m/s 2
a= 4 m/s 2
µ= 0.1
η= 1.5
Engineering & Reference
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