I’m also working on a bead
I’m also working on a bead sorter! Although I’m using “standard” colored plastic beads not those cylindrical melt together ones I think some of my concepts could be adapted to work!
I’ll post a quick drawing and a few pictures of the parts I already have constructed but let me explain my idea!
At first I did the same thing as you… Tried to use a funnel (sounds logical right?) but they just clogged up!!! Even with the addition of an agitator and screwing around with different size openings…
I had to think about it for a while… But I came up with the idea of a spinning disk at the bottom of a hopper full of beads! The disk would have holes all around the edge that were only large enough to fit one bead no mater the orientation! When the disk spins the beads naturally fall into the holes and a whisked away one at a time!!! As the disk spins a color sensor would detect the color of each bead one at a time, once the correct hopper was in place it would then turn a bit more, the bead finally falls through a hole which sends the bead down a tube into the appropriate hopper!!! Sounds simple enough! In fact, it is actually really simple! And very very effective! Though I’m not done with mine most of the major parts have been built and work perfectly together!
Links to my sketch and pictures : (Sorry there to large for this post… But please take a look!)
Sketch: Pretty self explanatory!
http://i80.photobucket.com/albums/j188/justinhulbert/jjkjkjj.jpg
Picture of my “wheel thing.” Again pretty simple just 1/4" ply attached to a hobby servo! Painted black so my color sensor (Parallax ColorPAL) only sees the beads…
http://i80.photobucket.com/albums/j188/justinhulbert/CIMG0362.jpg
My hopper system! Spinning disk full of PVC pipes! Can’t get much simpler! Used some old/extra car paint I had laying around to make the MDF look like it was powder coated!
http://i80.photobucket.com/albums/j188/justinhulbert/CIMG0348.jpg
This is a picture of the bottom of my hopper! (The part that spins) There are a bunch of screws, which if you look at closely form a binary count! There is a reader on the other half that picks up this count! Also you can see my acrylic mounting plate which attaches to the gear motor below!
http://i80.photobucket.com/albums/j188/justinhulbert/CIMG0357.jpg
This is the “other half” or the actual bottom of my hopper! (The part that doesn’t spin) Here you can see the little rollers I used to keep an even gap between the “binary screws” and my reader! The reader is actually really simple! Just a pice of wood with some scraps of springy brass stuck into the side! Soldered some wires and brushed on some liquid electrical tape! Each set of “binary screws” had an end screw… This end screw picks up 5v from the reader (when they make contact) and sends 5v to all the other screws, which then gets sent back to the appropriate pins on the reader! Simple! Easy to detect with a micro controller!
http://i80.photobucket.com/albums/j188/justinhulbert/CIMG0349.jpg
Hopefully this all makes some sort of since! I’ll be sure to post more pics and a movie if I ever finish this! Any questions or suggestions please let me know!