Bar Code Travel Speed Considerations; Parallel Bar Code Direction - Avery Dennison Monarch Verifier 938 Operating Instructions Manual

Paxar 938 monarch verifier product manual
Hide thumbs Also See for Monarch Verifier 938:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Ai m beam onto w hite line
Note:
Do not let the verifier's beam stop on a bar code when logging
data, because it logs unwanted data.
B a r C o d e T r a v e l S p e e d C o n s i d e r a t i o n s
A bar code should be present in the beam for at least five scans for most
reliable operation. The verifier performs a minimum of 100
scans/analyses per second. At that rate, each analysis is accomplished in
10 milliseconds max. Therefore, a bar code must be in the beam for at
least 50 milliseconds to be reliably analyzed.

Parallel Bar Code Direction

In parallel bar code (picket fence) travel direction, a bar code is in the
laser beam throughout the height of the shortest bar in the code. An easy
way to estimate the fastest speed the code can travel through the beam
is to divide the height of the shortest bar in the code by the maximum
time required for the verifier to take five scans of the code.
Example: Calculate the maximum travel speed where the shortest bar
height in a code is .5 inches and the verifier being used performs a
minimum of 100 scans/analyses per second. Five scans requires 50
milliseconds (.05 seconds) to gather, so .5 inches (bar code height)
divided by .05 seconds (time needed to gather 5 scans) = 10
inches/second. Therefore, the maximum speed the code can travel
through the beam is 10 inches per second.
Non-Knife Setup
Installation & Setup 2-13

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

Monarch 938 verifier

Table of Contents