- Relife
- Blog
Portable ESD magazine racks let SMT teams reposition PCB buffers during line changeover—buyers should plan rack count, stackable empty storage, and grounded cart moves instead of treating “portable” as a standalone catalogue label.
This guide is for line leaders, industrial engineers, and EMS buyers rebalancing Porte-revues ESD buffers. For general buffering, see the anti-static magazine rack buffering guide. For width adjustment during changeover, see the handle-adjustable magazine rack RFQ guide.

Contents
- Part 1. What does portable mean for ESD magazine racks?
- Part 2. When do movable racks fit line changeover?
- Part 3. How many racks belong at each buffer segment?
- Part 4. How should racks pair with ESD trolleys and carts?
- Part 5. What footprint and weight limits apply to manual moves?
- Part 6. What belongs in a changeover buffer plan?
- Part 7. Which Sanwei racks fit portable buffer programs?
Part 1. What does portable mean for ESD magazine racks?
In export catalogues, portable usually means the rack is light enough to reposition by hand or on a cart—not necessarily fold-flat for airline travel. Typical traits:
| Catalogue term | Practical meaning | RFQ confirm |
|---|---|---|
| Portable / mobile | Manual reposition between stations | Loaded weight |
| Stackable (empty) | Nested storage during changeover | Nested height |
| Movable buffer | Not bolted to fixed automation | Loader interface if any |
| Line-side rack | Stays in EPA during moves | Grounding path on cart |
Sanwei’s ESD Magazine Rack solution page lists stackable design and a 355×320×563 mm standard example—useful anchors when comparing portable programs across suppliers.
Portable does not replace fixed loader magazines unless drawings show automation fit—see Fit Boundary in Part 7.
Part 2. When do movable racks fit line changeover?
Line changeover—new product, rerouted conveyor, or temporary bottleneck—forces teams to add, remove, or relocate WIP buffers without waiting for fixed equipment installs.
| Scenario | Portable rack role | Alternative |
|---|---|---|
| NPI trial on existing line | Temporary buffer before printer or AOI | Fixed rack purchase premature |
| Line rebalancing after takt change | Shift buffer from placement to inspection | Conveyor extension project |
| Weekend layout test | Roll racks in/out for spaghetti-diagram trials | Permanent floor anchors |
| Outsourced second shift | Share rack pool across cells | Duplicate automation magazines |
Pair mobility planning with guide sheet count when width ranges differ—see the 5-sheet versus 2-sheet guide capacity planning article in the same batch.
Tip: Mark floor tape zones for empty stack locations so changeover crews return racks to the same EPA grounding points. — Source: lean buffer practice; confirm with your ESD coordinator.
Part 3. How many racks belong at each buffer segment?
There is no universal rack-per-line formula—derive count from takt, panel batch size, et maximum WIP policy.
| Input | Planning question | Starting heuristic |
|---|---|---|
| Machine cycle time | Minutes of WIP allowed? | 1–3 magazines per critical gap |
| AOI/rework removal | Boards pulled mid-line? | +1 spare rack per rework island |
| Mixed panel widths | Parallel width setups? | + racks per active width band |
| Night shift coverage | Racks in transit at shift change? | +1 empty reserve stack |
Document minimum and maximum WIP magazines in the line balance sheet—not only average consumption.
Part 4. How should racks pair with ESD trolleys and carts?
Moving racks without grounding breaks ESD control programs aligned with CEI 61340-5-1 et ANSI/ESD S20.20.
| Move type | Recommended pairing | Fit boundary |
|---|---|---|
| Aisle reposition (<5 m) | Grounded cart with strap to rack feet | Re-test Ω after move if policy requires |
| Cross-bay transport | Chariot ESD sized to footprint | Do not drag racks on ungrounded carts |
| Temporary off-line hold | Dedicated EPA cart bay | Label cart ID in traveler |
Sanwei publishes 10⁶–10⁹ Ω on its magazine rack solution page—request lot logs and confirm readings after racks ride on shared trolleys used for other material.
Part 5. What footprint and weight limits apply to manual moves?
Mid-size footprints such as 355×320 mm et 400×320 mm class racks dominate manual programs. Larger 535×530 mm et 630×530 mm units often stay at fixed automation points because loaded mass exceeds comfortable two-person moves.
| Footprint class | Portable fit | Changeover note |
|---|---|---|
| 355×320 mm | Haut | Standard pool rack |
| 400×320 mm | Haut | Good manual buffer |
| 460×400 mm | Medium | Confirm two-person lift SOP |
| 630×530 mm | Low | Usually fixed automation |
RFQ should state loaded PCB count per move et maximum component height—tall boards shift center of gravity when racks tilt on carts.
Part 6. What belongs in a changeover buffer plan?
Include in the line changeover packet:
- Buffer map — rack IDs, floor zones, grounded cart assignments.
- Width settings — link to handle-adjust or screw-adjust SOP if widths change.
- Empty stack procedure — nested height limit from supplier.
- ESD test cadence — when to re-check racks after moves.
- Spare rack count — minimum pool for peak WIP.
- Heat zone flags — mark racks that may enter warm queues per reflow staging guide.
| Plan gap | Typical failure mode |
|---|---|
| No cart grounding diagram | ESD audit finding after changeover |
| No rack ID labels | Wrong width setting on mixed pool |
| Ignoring empty-stack height | Aisle blockage during layout test |
Part 7. Which Sanwei racks fit portable buffer programs?

Start from Sanwei’s ESD Magazine Rack category and prioritize mid-size footprints for manual pools.
When RFQ centers on manual repositioning between buffer points, review the 400(L)×320(W) mm listing as a conversation anchor. Pair moves with an appropriately sized Chariot ESD from the same supplier ecosystem.

Fit Boundary
| Buyer situation | Reasonable path | Avoid |
|---|---|---|
| Frequent line layout changes | Mid-size portable pool + cart grounding | Largest footprint as default pool rack |
| Fixed loader automation | Fixed magazine spec with OEM | Assuming portable catalogue rack indexes in loader |
| High-mix width changes | Portable pool + handle-adjust racks | Single-width pool without adjust SOP |
| Warm queue buffers | Heat-rated guides per reflow guide | Room-temp pool racks in hot aisles |
Send layout sketches through Contactez-nous when rack quantity or slot pitch differs from catalog defaults.
FAQ
What is a portable ESD magazine rack used for on SMT lines?
It buffers PCBs between machines and can be repositioned during line changeover—typically by hand or on a grounded cart—not fixed as permanent automation hardware.
How many magazine racks do you need per SMT line?
Derive from takt, allowed WIP, rework pulls, and width bands—most critical gaps start with one to three magazines before simulation refines the count.
Can ESD magazine racks be moved on carts?
Yes, on grounded ESD carts or trolleys with a documented strap path—verify resistance per your facility SOP after moves if required.
How do you plan buffers during line changeover?
Map buffer zones, rack IDs, cart assignments, width SOPs, and empty-stack locations before moving equipment—include ESD re-test cadence.
What size portable PCB magazine rack is standard?
355×320 mm and 400×320 mm class footprints are common mid-size examples; confirm outer L×W×H against your panel mix and cart deck.
Do portable racks replace fixed automation magazines?
No—loader/unloader programs need OEM-approved fixed specs unless supplier confirms automation fit with drawings.
Should empty racks be stacked during changeover?
When supplier confirms stackable empty design—Sanwei lists stackable design on its solution page—use marked floor zones to protect guides.
What belongs in a portable rack RFQ?
Footprint, loaded weight, stackable empty height, cart pairing, quantity bands, slot pitch, and grounding requirements.
Laisser un commentaire