NewEngineer said:
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Question: when applying a cap to a bottle, is the downward force more important or is applying an equal force on the sides of the cap and "smushing" it closed?
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Take a good look at a bottle capper. The crown caps are flared out prior to capping, with ribbing so a straight down cylinder pushes those ribs in at the side, over, and around the lip of the bottle.
As far as I can tell, the downward forces really are applied to the edges. That crimping action around the lip is what pulls the cap down to seal at the top. Maybe there is some downward force on the cap as well to assist, I don't know. Look at a capper.
Are you trying to re-invent the wheel? Cappers are tried and trued, if you think ganging up six cappers is a benefit, go for it. But use the current capper designs - they work, since the late 1800's I think.
Does your filler design automatically stop when each bottle hits the correct fill level? If you have not accounted on paper for different fill rates on each bottle, I can just about assure you that you will see this problem on your prototype. The automatic fillers at the home brew level that I've seen get mixed reviews, they get kinda 'tweaky'. That problem will be multiplied by six if you try to fill six at a time.
I still feel you are providing a solution that doesn't really have a problem. Have you really thought through the advantages of a multi-capper? Think of it this way:
A) Single capper:
A1) Set filled bottle in place under capper.
A2) Place cap on bottle.
A3) Pull lever.
A4) Remove bottle and place in box.
Repeat 6x
B) Six-up capper:
B1) Set filled bottle in place under capper. Repeat 6x.
B2) Place cap on a pre-load strip. Repeat 6x.
B3) Place cap strip over the six bottles.
B4) Pull lever.
B5) Remove bottle and place in box. Repeat 6x.
You have added one step for each six bottles (loading a strip of caps), and reduced 6 steps to one (pulling the lever). Three other steps remain unchanged. Compare the times for each (pulling the lever is maybe a second or two?). What are you gaining? At what cost, complexity, storage space?
Have you actually bottled 5 gallons of beer before, or is this all based on assumptions?