I think that $10k buys a person a working and easy-to-use second-hand machine like the Quad's that I have. Such a machine will be much more capable than anything home-made or designed for hobbyists, largely because all the bugs are worked out.
rx8pilot, can you give an update on the Quad IV C you have? I need to upgrade my current machine, Philips CSM84, with no vision. It just isn't accurate for 0.65 and 0.5 mm pitch parts. Also, the centering jaws seem to only work for parts with about the same 2:1 length-width ratio. Square chips do not center well.
After looking at tons of machines (I fell in love with the Samsung CP45FV, but out of my price range) I have some people suggesting the PPM-retrofitted Quad IV C with the up-camera (QuadVu 6). The specs sure LOOK good, but I'm wondering how well it does in the real world? Also, how reliable are the feeders, how easy is it to program, etc?
I wrote a C program to convert my CAD system's P&P file format to the CSM's form, so I should have no trouble preparing the raw P&P data for it.
Thanks for any info you can provide. Also, is there a place where I can look at the operator/programming manual?
Jon