Optical inspection is suitable for virtually any manufactured product requiring checks for appearance, dimensions, completeness, or identification.
- Precision Electronic Components
- Examples: Printed Circuit Boards, chips, connectors, capacitors, resistors, LEDs.
- Inspects: PCB solder joints, missing/misplaced components, part dimensions, surface defects.
- Semiconductors & Wafers
- Examples: Silicon wafers, packaged chips.
- Inspects: Wafer contamination, scratches, defect patterns; package appearance, leads, marking.
- Automotive Components
- Examples: Pistons, gears, bearings, seals, connectors, lights, dashboards.
- Inspects: Dimensional accuracy, surface flaws, assembly completeness, printing.
- Pharmaceuticals & Medical Devices
- Examples: Tablets, capsules, syringes, vials, surgical tools, packaging.
- Inspects: Missing/damaged pills, print quality, label placement, surface defects.
- Food & Beverage Packaging
- Examples: Bottle caps, labels, cans, pouches.
- Inspects: Seal integrity, label position/contents, date/batch codes, foreign material, fill level.
- Plastic & Metal Parts
- Examples: Phone cases, auto interiors, precision gears, stamped parts, screws.
- Inspects: Scratches, sink marks, flash, contamination, color variation, dimensions.
- Printed Materials & Packaging
- Examples: Cigarette packs, pharmaceutical boxes, cosmetic packaging, labels.
- Inspects: Print quality, die-cut accuracy, barcode/QR code readability.
Summary: Optical inspection is highly suitable when products are: 1) Produced in high volume; 2) Have clear, quantifiable standards; 3) Are too repetitive, fatiguing, or precise for human inspection; 4) Require 100% inspection and full data traceability.
