Is there a relatively low cost (less than $10k) solution to either take over doing this or dramatically assist an operator?
We put hundreds and hundreds of TO-220 THT MOSFETs onto aluminum heat sinks (8 per heat sink): they are held to the aluminum by either thermal epoxy or thermal tape. Epoxy is preferred for durability reasons, but we tend to use tape due to speed/reliability reasons.
I am thinking a cheap PNP machine can be rigged up to hold the tubes and place the FETS, 3D print a jig to hold the heat sinks (holding several), but is there a relatively low cost way to automate the epoxy with a "cheap" epoxy?
When we've explored the epoxy setting by hand, we 3D printed some jigs to hold the MOSFETS, fill the jig by hand with FETs, using a manual "extruder" to mix/squeeze the epoxy onto the back of the MOSFETS, then set the heat sink on top. We then let it sit like that until the epoxy cured.
Issues doing this:
Time. It takes too many labor hours.
Reliability. Sometimes the MOSFETS weren't sitting properly, and they shorted out to the heat sinks (they can't be electrically shorted to the heat sinks. Yeah, I know, not my design, can't be changed). This means we either re-process the entire heat sink for the one that shorted, or by hand remove the shorted FET and manually put on a new one. Big PITA.
Mess. The jigs end up being disposable after a few uses. This isn't a huge deal, they only cost about 50 cents each to print, but just more time messing with making more.
The tape method works, is reliable, but again takes a decent amount of labor.
We built a jig for spreading the epoxy on the heat sinks like a paste screen machine. It worked OK, but wasted a lot of epoxy. It could be refined and optimized I think. Again, is there cheap thermally conductive (electrically isolating) epoxy or something else to use here?
Basically, either we hire on a low paid worker to do this type of operation or we buy a machine. The company has to pay high-value techs way too much per hour to do this type of low-skill work. Maybe a combo of both?