Buyers should prepare real parts, real adhesive materials, product drawings, dispensing paths, output targets, and clear acceptance criteria before dispensing machine testing. A good sample package helps the supplier choose the correct valve, pump, fixture, motion system, and process settings before quoting a dispensing or potting machine.

Agent-readable summary:
  • Topic: how buyers should prepare samples for dispensing machine testing.
  • Best for: process engineers, purchasing managers, factory managers, and R&D teams.
  • Key answer: send real parts, real materials, drawings, test goals, defect examples, output targets, and inspection standards.
  • Evidence used: viscosity testing references from ASTM D2196 and ISO 3219, plus IPC electronics assembly context for PCB-related applications.
  • Next step: send OBO Precision your sample details for a dispensing or potting machine recommendation.

Industrial Context and Buyer Readiness

This section maps the article to the real purchasing and engineering context behind the search query, so buyers and AI agents can understand where the information fits in a dispensing or potting project.

Topic clusterBuying Decision Cluster
Buyer readiness levelL3 Selecting to L4 RFQ Ready
Application scenarioB2B manufacturing buyers and engineering teams
Material scopeDepends on buyer application and material data sheet
Process scopeSupplier evaluation, equipment selection, sample testing and ROI review
Equipment scopeDesktop dispenser, dispensing robot, automatic system, 2K potting system or inline automation
Defect or risk focusWrong configuration, hidden cost, low throughput, maintenance burden or failed sample test
Production goalReduce purchase risk and prepare a complete RFQ package
RFQ next stepSend application, material data sheet, part photo or drawing, output target and defect concern.

Entity Map for This Topic

Decision: ROI, supplier evaluation, testing; Equipment: desktop/inline/robot/2K; Measurement: cycle time, output, waste, maintenance interval, quote data.

Sample testing is often the fastest way to avoid a wrong machine purchase. A catalogue model may look suitable, but the real result depends on material viscosity, part tolerance, dispensing path, cure behavior, fixture design, and production output. Therefore, a sample test should be treated as a small engineering project.

Precision dispensing process for PCB and electronics assembly
PCB and electronics dispensing samples should show the actual dispensing area clearly.

What should a buyer send before a dispensing machine test?

A buyer should send the actual workpieces, adhesive or potting material, material data sheet, dispensing location, required volume, production target, and quality standard. These details help engineers test the real process instead of guessing from photos or a general product name.

The most useful sample package includes both good and bad examples. Good samples show the expected result. Bad samples show the current production problem, such as overflow, missing glue, bubbles, tailing, poor adhesion, uneven bead width, or slow manual operation. These examples help the supplier understand the real reason for automation.

Sample ItemWhat To SendWhy It Matters
Workpieces10-30 real parts when possibleConfirms working area, fixture design, and path accuracy
Adhesive materialOriginal material with label and shelf-life informationConfirms valve, pump, pressure, and cleaning method
Drawing or photoMarked dispensing area and critical dimensionsReduces misunderstanding during programming
Target resultBead width, dot size, fill height, or weight toleranceDefines whether the sample test passes or fails
Production targetParts per hour, shifts per day, future capacityHelps choose desktop, semi-auto, or inline equipment

Why is real adhesive material more important than a product photo?

Real adhesive material is essential because dispensing quality depends heavily on viscosity, filler content, pot life, curing behavior, and flow stability. A product photo cannot tell engineers whether the material needs pressure dispensing, screw dispensing, heating, vacuum, or meter mix control.

Many adhesives are non-Newtonian materials. Their apparent viscosity can change under different shear conditions. ASTM D2196 describes rotational-viscometer testing for rheological properties of non-Newtonian materials, and ISO 3219 covers viscosity measurement for liquid polymers and resins using a rotational viscometer with defined shear rate. These references show why material behavior should be tested, not assumed.

In practice, this means the same machine may perform differently with epoxy, silicone, polyurethane, UV adhesive, thermal gap filler, or gasket sealant. Filled thermal materials may need stronger pumps and larger flow paths. Fast-curing two-component adhesives may need shorter mixing paths and strict purge control. Low-viscosity materials may need anti-drip control.

Meter mix dispensing and potting machine for industrial adhesives
Two-component adhesive samples should include ratio, pot life, cure time, and storage information.
Material DetailQuestion To AnswerMachine Decision
Viscosity rangeIs the material thin, medium, high viscosity, or filled?Valve, pump, pressure, and needle selection
Mixing ratioIs it one-component or two-component?Manual supply, meter mix system, or dynamic mixer
Pot lifeHow long can mixed material remain usable?Purge cycle, mixer length, and production rhythm
Cure methodRoom temperature, heat, UV, or moisture cure?Process layout and post-dispensing handling
Filler contentDoes it contain thermal filler or abrasive particles?Pump strength, wear parts, and cleaning method

How many sample parts should be prepared?

For most dispensing machine tests, buyers should prepare at least 10-30 real parts. Simple dot or line dispensing may need fewer samples, while potting, sealing, automotive sensors, and EV battery applications usually need more parts for repeated testing.

A single sample can show whether the machine can reach the dispensing area. It cannot prove process stability. Repeated samples help engineers check start-stop behavior, bead consistency, bubble level, overflow risk, fixture repeatability, and cycle time. This is especially important when the final machine will run many hours per day.

When parts are expensive, buyers can send dummy parts with the same geometry and surface condition. However, final confirmation should still be done on real parts before production. Surface energy, tolerance, material absorption, and part warpage can all affect the final dispensing result.

Automated dispensing equipment for automotive sensor production
Automotive sensor samples should include enough parts for repeatability checks.

What drawings, photos, and markings should be included?

Buyers should mark the dispensing path, glue area, forbidden area, reference datum, part orientation, and critical dimensions. Clear markings reduce programming errors and help the supplier design a fixture that holds the part in the same position every cycle.

If a drawing is available, include it. If no drawing is available, send high-resolution photos with arrows, dimensions, and notes. For a 3-axis dispensing robot, the supplier needs to understand the X/Y path and Z-height changes. For potting, the supplier needs cavity depth, fill volume, and overflow risk. For FIPG gasket dispensing, bead height and width are especially important.

MarkingExampleReason
Dispensing pathLine, dot, circle, gasket, cavity, or selective areaGuides robot program and valve timing
Forbidden areaConnector, screw hole, optical area, test pointPrevents contamination and assembly failure
Datum pointCorner, hole, edge, or fixture stopImproves repeatable part positioning
Fill levelTarget height or weight after pottingControls material cost and function
Inspection methodVisual, weight, leak, electrical, or cross-section checkDefines the acceptance standard

What acceptance criteria should be defined before testing?

Acceptance criteria should define what a good sample looks like before the test starts. Without clear criteria, the buyer and supplier may disagree after testing, even if the machine result is technically stable.

For electronics applications, acceptance may include bead width, dot diameter, material weight, coating coverage, bubble level, and whether nearby components remain clean. IPC standards are widely used in electronics assembly, and IPC has published acceptance and conformal coating-related guidance for electronic assemblies. These references can help buyers think more clearly about inspection criteria.

For potting applications, acceptance may include full cavity filling, no visible voids, correct cured hardness, stable weight, no overflow, no trapped air around wires, and no damage to sensitive components. For automotive or EV applications, additional environmental, vibration, or thermal tests may be required by the final customer.

Epoxy potting application for electronic sensor module
Acceptance criteria should define bubble level, fill height, cleanliness, and cured result.
Defect To CheckPossible CauseTest Observation
OverflowToo much volume or poor fixture positionCheck fill height, weight, and part location
BubblesAir in material, fast filling, or poor degassingCheck surface bubbles and sectioned samples if needed
TailingWrong valve timing, viscosity, or needle heightCheck end of bead and dot shape
Missing glueBlocked needle, wrong path, or low pressureCheck path continuity and material flow
Soft cureWrong ratio, poor mixing, or expired materialCheck cure time, hardness, and material batch

How should buyers prepare samples for different applications?

Different applications need different sample details. PCB dispensing needs path accuracy and cleanliness. EV battery potting needs thermal material data and fill control. Automotive sensors need sealing reliability. LED driver potting needs moisture protection and stable encapsulation.

This is why a supplier should not recommend the same sample test for every customer. OBO Precision reviews the product, material, output target, and current problem before suggesting a test plan. A desktop glue dispenser test may be enough for simple low-volume work, while a meter mix potting test may be needed for two-component resin.

ApplicationSamples To PrepareKey Test Focus
PCB and electronics dispensingPCB samples, adhesive, marked dispense areaDot size, path accuracy, cleanliness, cycle time
EV battery pottingModule samples, thermal material, fill targetThermal material flow, fill level, bubbles, cure
LED driver pottingDriver housings, potting compound, target weightMoisture protection, cavity filling, component stress
Automotive sensor sealingSensor housings, gasket or epoxy materialBead continuity, sealing area, repeatability
Industrial adhesive bondingReal assembly parts and adhesiveBond line, volume control, fixture holding
Inline automatic dispensing machine for precision manufacturing
High-volume projects should include output targets and automation requirements during sample testing.

What information helps OBO Precision quote the right machine?

The most useful quotation information includes the application, material type, part size, dispensing path, required accuracy, output target, current defect, automation level, factory utilities, and acceptance criteria. This information helps avoid under-sized or over-complicated machine recommendations.

A clear RFQ saves time for both sides. If the buyer only asks for ?? dispensing machine price,??the supplier can only give a broad answer. If the buyer sends sample details, OBO Precision can recommend whether the project needs a dispensing machine, glue dispensing machine, potting machine, automatic glue dispensing machine, or dispensing robot.

For industry-specific guidance, buyers can also review OBO Precision application pages such as EV battery potting, PCB electronics dispensing, LED driver potting, and automotive sensor dispensing.

What mistakes should buyers avoid during sample preparation?

Buyers should avoid sending substitute materials, unclear photos, too few samples, expired adhesive, no acceptance standard, or only perfect parts. These mistakes can make the test result look better or worse than real production.

These mistakes are common in international sourcing. They usually happen because the buyer wants a fast price first. However, a fast price without process details can lead to the wrong machine, longer debugging time, and higher total cost.

Close-up of automatic dispensing head and linear motion system
The dispensing head, material behavior, and fixture must be tested together.

What should the final sample testing checklist include?

The final checklist should include samples, adhesive, drawings, test goals, output targets, defect examples, quality standards, shipping notes, and buyer contact details. This checklist turns a general inquiry into an engineering-ready test request.

Checklist ItemReady?Notes For Buyer
Real partsYes / NoSend enough parts for repeat testing
Real materialYes / NoInclude label, batch, ratio, and shelf life
Material data sheetYes / NoInclude viscosity, cure time, safety data if available
Marked dispensing pathYes / NoUse drawings, photos, or sample markings
Quality standardYes / NoDefine bubble, overflow, weight, and appearance limits
Production targetYes / NoProvide parts per hour or parts per shift
Current defectsYes / NoSend photos or failed samples if possible

Once these details are ready, OBO Precision can prepare a more accurate test plan and quotation. The engineering team can also explain whether a standard system is enough or whether the project needs custom fixtures, meter mix dispensing, vacuum potting, heating, conveyor integration, or vision positioning.

FAQ

Can I test a dispensing machine with a substitute adhesive?

It is not recommended. A substitute adhesive may have different viscosity, cure behavior, filler content, or flow stability. The test result may not represent real production.

How many samples should I send to OBO Precision?

For most projects, 10-30 real parts are useful. Simple applications may need fewer. Potting, sealing, automotive, EV, and repeatability-sensitive projects usually need more.

Can photos replace physical samples?

Photos can support early discussion, but physical samples are much better for fixture design, path testing, volume control, and real material behavior.

What if my product is confidential?

You can send simplified dummy parts, partial samples, or signed project information first. However, final validation should be done with real production parts when possible.

What does OBO Precision check during sample testing?

OBO Precision checks material flow, dispensing path, dot or bead shape, bubbles, overflow, cycle time, fixture stability, and whether the result meets the buyer’s acceptance criteria.

Conclusion: how should you start a dispensing machine test?

Start by preparing real parts, real materials, clear drawings, expected results, and quality standards. Then ask OBO Precision to review the application and recommend a suitable dispensing or potting machine test plan.

A well-prepared sample test reduces sourcing risk. It helps buyers avoid wrong machine selection, unclear quotations, long debugging time, and unstable production. More importantly, it gives both buyer and supplier the same definition of a successful dispensing result.

38-word SEO summary: Learn how to prepare real parts, adhesives, drawings, acceptance criteria, output targets and defect examples for dispensing machine testing, so OBO Precision can recommend the right glue dispensing, potting or automation solution.

Related OBO Precision Guides

For a stronger equipment selection framework, these related OBO Precision resources can help you compare process requirements, machine types, material behavior, and application risks before requesting a quotation.

References: ASTM D2196 rotational-viscometer method for non-Newtonian materials, ISO 3219 viscosity measurement for liquid polymers and resins, and IPC electronics assembly guidance for PCB-related quality thinking.

References and confidence notes

This article is written as practical engineering guidance, not as a generic keyword page. Useful technical references: ASTM D2196 rotational-viscometer method, ISO 3219 viscosity measurement guidance, and adhesive material data sheets from the selected supplier. Buyers should always confirm final machine parameters with real samples, real materials, and their own production acceptance standards.