At AUD 0.08 per parcel sorted, a high-speed logistics sorting system processing 15,000 parcels per hour generates AUD 1,200 in revenue every 60 minutes. When the diverter conveyor sprocket loses positioning accuracy and starts mis-sorting, that revenue evaporates — replaced by re-sort labour, customer complaints and SLA penalties. Distribution centres across Sydney, Brisbane, Melbourne, Gold Coast and Canberra are under constant pressure to increase sort rates while maintaining 99.5%+ accuracy.
Ever-power Australia Ladder Sprocket Co., Ltd. manufactures low-inertia POM and UHMW-PE ladder sprockets optimised for servo-driven logistics sorting systems operating at 200+ sorts per minute. Our polymer sprockets weigh 75-85% less than steel equivalents, enabling servo motors to achieve target positions 30-40% faster — directly improving sort accuracy and throughput at the diverter point.
| Parameter | Specification | Customisable Range |
|---|---|---|
| Material | POM/UHMW-PE | PEEK, SS304 |
| Pitch Range | 9.525-25.4 mm | Custom available |
| Teeth | 12-48 | 8-120 |
| Bore | 12-60 mm | Custom |
| Tolerance | H8 slip fit | H6 on request |
| Hub | Type A/B | Custom |
| Hardness | Shore D 85 (POM) | — |
| Chain | ANSI 25-50, tab chain | Full range |
| Surface | As-machined | Custom |
| Lead Time | 10 business days | Expedite available |
| MOQ | 1 piece | — |
| Compliance | ISO 606 / ANSI B29.1 | — |
| Compliance | ISO 606 / ANSI B29.1 | — |
| Compliance | ISO 606 / ANSI B29.1 | — |
| Compliance | ISO 606 / ANSI B29.1 | — |
| Compliance | ISO 606 / ANSI B29.1 | — |
| Compliance | ISO 606 / ANSI B29.1 | — |
| Compliance | ISO 606 / ANSI B29.1 | — |
| Compliance | ISO 606 / ANSI B29.1 | — |
| Compliance | ISO 606 / ANSI B29.1 | — |
In high-speed sorting, the performance metric that determines profitability is servo positioning accuracy at maximum sort rate:
| Metric | Steel Sprocket | Ever-power POM Sprocket |
|---|---|---|
| Rotational inertia (relative) | 1.0x (baseline) | 0.15-0.20x |
| Servo settling time at 200 sorts/min | 12-15 ms | 7-9 ms |
| Positional repeatability | 0.8-1.2 mm | 0.2-0.4 mm |
| Sort accuracy at 200+/min | 97-98.5% | 99.5-99.8% |
| Noise at operator position | 78-82 dB(A) | 65-69 dB(A) |
| Pitch stability after 500k cycles | 0.08-0.12 mm drift | < 0.02 mm drift |
In a logistics sorting system, the ladder sprocket serves as the final kinematic link between the servo motor and the parcel-diverting mechanism. The critical relationship is inertia-matching: the servo controller’s ability to achieve rapid, accurate positioning depends on the ratio between motor rotor inertia and total reflected load inertia (including the sprocket). Industry best practice targets a reflected-to-motor inertia ratio below 5:1. A steel sprocket on a small servo drive may push this ratio to 8-10:1, causing overshoot, oscillation and settling-time delays that manifest as sort errors. Our POM sprockets reduce the sprocket contribution to reflected inertia by 80%, typically bringing the system ratio into the optimal 2-4:1 range — enabling the servo to achieve target position within 7-9 milliseconds versus 12-15 ms with steel.
Chain: ANSI 25-50, table-top chains, tab chains, timing belts. Compatible with Vanderlande, Dematic, Beumer, TGW and Interroll sortation platforms.
Brand references for compatibility only; no trademark affiliation.
Use this flowchart to specify your logistics sorting sprocket:
Step 1 — Sort Rate:
→ Under 100/min → SS304 or POM
→ 100-200/min → POM (best inertia-to-strength ratio)
→ Above 200/min → POM or PEEK (highest cycle stability)
Step 2 — Parcel Weight:
→ Under 15 kg → Standard POM hub
→ 15-35 kg → POM with stainless keyed insert
→ Above 35 kg → Contact engineering for PEEK or reinforced solution
Step 3 — Environment:
→ Standard warehouse → POM or UHMW-PE
→ Cleanroom / pharma → PEEK
→ Cold-store → UHMW-PE (rated to -260°C)
Step 4 — Provide chain pitch, bore diameter and servo model to our engineering team for inertia-matching calculation.
Step 1 — System Shutdown: Power down sortation system via PLC. Ensure all servo axes are disabled and mechanically braked. E-commerce fulfilment centres may require scheduled maintenance windows — coordinate with operations.
Step 2 — Remove Guarding: Logistics sorters have extensive safety guarding. Document bolt positions and wiring routing before disassembly.
Step 3 — Chain Break & Removal: Release automatic tensioner. Break chain at master link. Thread chain off sprocket. Inspect chain for pitch elongation — replace if elongation exceeds 1.5% of nominal pitch.
Step 4 — Sprocket Swap: Polymer sprockets use slip-fit bore (H8). Loosen set screws, slide off old sprocket, slide on new unit. Insert key, tighten screws. No heating or puller required.
Step 5 — Calibration Run: Re-thread chain. Set tension to 2% sag. Run sortation system at 50% speed. Verify servo position accuracy at diverter point using PLC diagnostic screen. Gradually increase to full speed. Verify 99.5%+ sort accuracy before resuming live operation.
Symptom: Sort accuracy drops from 99.7% to 97.2% during peak throughput (200+ sorts/min). Mis-sorted parcels accumulate in the reject lane. PLC logs show servo position error exceeding 0.5 mm at the diverter sprocket.
Root Cause: Cumulative pitch error on a worn steel sprocket. After 50,000+ high-speed indexing cycles, tooth wear creates progressive pitch growth that compounds with each revolution. At 200+ sorts/min, the cumulative position drift exceeds the diverter actuation window — parcels arrive at the wrong chute.
Solution: Replace with Ever-power POM ladder sprocket with pitch tolerance within 0.03 mm cumulative. POM maintains dimensional stability through 500,000+ indexing cycles without measurable pitch growth. The lower inertia also reduces servo settling time, allowing the controller to correct micro-position errors between cycles that a heavier steel sprocket cannot.
★★★★★ — E-Commerce Fulfilment Centre, Sydney NSW
Application: Cross-belt sorter, 220 sorts/min. Automation manager Linda Chung reported: “Sort accuracy jumped from 97.8% to 99.6% after replacing steel sprockets with Ever-power POM. The inertia reduction lets our servos hit target position 35% faster. ROI was achieved in 6 weeks through reduced re-sort labour.”
★★★★★ — Parcel Distribution Hub, Brisbane QLD
Application: Tilt-tray sorter diverter drive, ANSI 40 chain at 180 trays/min. Systems engineer Ahmed Farouk stated: “Noise from the old steel sprockets was 79 dB(A) at operator position. POM brought it down to 66 dB(A). Our OH&S team approved removal of the acoustic enclosure — freeing floor space for an additional sort lane.”
★★★★★ — Pharmaceutical Distribution Centre, Melbourne VIC
Application: Temperature-controlled goods sorter, POM sprockets on servo-driven diverters. Logistics engineer Tanya Wells noted: “Zero-particulate POM was required for our GMP-rated clean zone. Ever-power sprockets meet our particulate specs and the positional accuracy is excellent — under 0.3 mm repeatability.”
★★★★ — Airport Baggage Handling Integrator, Gold Coast QLD
Application: High-speed baggage diverter conveyor. Project manager Jack Renshaw commented: “We trialled Ever-power POM on one diverter station as a proof-of-concept. Results were strong — we are now specifying them across the entire terminal upgrade project.”
★★★★★ — 3PL Warehouse, Canberra ACT
Application: Multi-level sortation system, 4 diverter zones at different speeds. Systems integrator Michelle Park explained: “Ever-power calculated tooth counts for each diverter zone to achieve matched sort timing across all levels. Parcel handoff between levels is perfectly synchronised — zero collisions since installation.”
🔗Precision Tab Chains
Low-backlash table-top and tab chains for sortation diverter drives. Matched pitch tolerance to POM sprockets.
⚙Zero-Backlash Servo Couplings
Bellows and jaw couplings for direct servo-to-sprocket shaft connection. Eliminates coupling backlash from positioning error.
⚪Compact Pillow Block Bearings
Miniature bearing units for space-constrained sortation diverter stations. Sealed, lubricated-for-life.
Polymer resins from FDA-compliant, REACH-registered producers. Sprocket dimensions to ISO 606. ISO 9001 : 2015 certified. Anti-static testing to IEC 61340.
We are Ever-power Australia Ladder Sprocket Co., Ltd. Logistics automation is one of the fastest-growing sectors in our Australian order book. We supply polymer and stainless ladder sprockets to sortation system integrators, e-commerce fulfilment centres and parcel-distribution hubs across Sydney, Brisbane, Melbourne, Gold Coast and Canberra. Our understanding of servo-drive inertia matching — not just sprocket machining — is what differentiates us from general plastics fabricators who machine sprockets as a sideline.
Share your sort rate, parcel weight range, servo motor model and chain specification. Our automation engineers will calculate the optimal inertia-matched sprocket and deliver a quotation within one business day. Contact us at vendas@laddersprockets.top or visit our enquiry page.
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