BOMwiki the bill-of-materials encyclopedia

Queue Ticket Dispenser Product

Overview

A queue ticket dispenser is the entry point of a queue-management system: the kiosk in a bank, clinic, government office, or telecom store where a customer taps a service category and receives a numbered paper ticket. Behind the ticket is a server that holds one virtual queue per service, assigns the customer's number, estimates the wait, and later calls the number to a counter — flashing it on LED displays and announcing it through a chime. The dispenser decouples arrival order from physical standing: customers sit down, and fairness is enforced by the number sequence instead of by elbows.

The kiosk itself is four subsystems in a vandal-tolerant box: a Touchscreen Module for service selection, a Thermal Printer Module that produces the ticket, an Embedded Controller that runs the client software and talks to the queue server, and the Counter Display Interface that drives the "now serving" displays in older, self-contained installations.

Ticket printing

The printer is a direct-thermal mechanism, the same class used in receipt printers, chosen because it has no ink, toner, or ribbon — the only consumable is the Thermal Paper Roll. The Thermal Printhead is a ceramic bar carrying a single line of resistive dots at 203 dpi; as the Paper Feed Stepper steps the paper past it on the Platen Roller, each dot pulses a few milliseconds of heat where the heat-sensitive coating should turn black. A ticket — number, service code, queue position, timestamp, often a QR code linking to live wait status — prints in about two seconds at 150–250 mm/s.

The Auto Cutter then severs the ticket, and the Ticket Chute presents it through the fascia. Cutters are the highest-wear mechanism in the kiosk and are specified around one million cuts; printheads are rated by paper distance, 50–100 km. The Paper Sensor reads black registration marks for fixed-length ticket stock and detects paper-out, while the Low-Paper Sensor on the roll flank warns the staff dashboard before the roll runs dry — an empty dispenser silently breaks the whole queue discipline, so near-end alerting matters more here than in a receipt printer.

Controller and software

The Compute SoC Module on the I/O Carrier Board boots Linux or Android from Storage Module and runs the kiosk client full-screen. The client renders the service menu on the LCD Panel behind a sealed Touch Digitizer, requests a ticket number from the queue server over the Network Module link, and sends the rendered ticket to the Printer Driver Board over USB. If the network drops, the kiosk keeps issuing from an offline number cache and reconciles when the link returns, because a branch cannot stop taking customers over a router fault.

Unattended 24/7 duty shapes the electronics: a Hardware Watchdog hard-resets the controller if the application hangs, the Surge & EMI Filter clamps line transients, and remote management agents report paper level, printhead temperature, and uptime to a fleet dashboard.

Calling and displays

When an agent presses "next" at a counter terminal, the server marks the ticket called and pushes the event to displays. Modern systems do this over IP to networked LED or LCD signage; legacy and self-contained systems use the kiosk's Counter Display Interface, where the Display Protocol Controller addresses daisy-chained LED counter displays over an RS-485 Transceiver bus that can run over a kilometre of cable through a building. A Relay output triggers the chime, and the kiosk Speaker or hall audio announces "ticket 247 to counter 5." The same event stream feeds management statistics — arrivals per hour, service times per agent, abandonment — which is the data product that queue-management vendors actually sell; the ticket is just its physical token.

Enclosure

The body is powder-coated steel: a Floor Pedestal bolted to the floor topped with the screen and printer bay, or a wall-mounted box in smaller branches. The Screen Bezel gaskets the glass against dust and cleaning sprays, and the Service Door Lock gates the only routine human interaction with the machine's interior — dropping in a fresh roll onto the Roll Holder, threading it through the Paper Path Guide, and closing the door, a task designed to take under a minute because it is done by branch staff, not technicians.

Build & assembly graph

expand / collapse · shared sub-assemblies converge · links to related products · est. labour
product / assembly shared across products atomic part related product

Tap an assembly to expand/collapse · tap a part to open it · use “Open page” for any node · drag to pan, scroll to zoom.

Bill of materials

8 top-level lines · 49 rows shown · 307 parts total · indented to 3 levels
# Item / sub-assembly Part no. Qty/assy Ext. qty Parts Type
1 Thermal Printer Module 6 parts queue-ticket-dispenser-printer 1 116 assembly
1.1 Thermal Printhead queue-ticket-dispenser-printhead 1 part
1.2 Platen Roller queue-ticket-dispenser-platen 1 part
1.3 Auto Cutter queue-ticket-dispenser-cutter 1 part
1.4 Paper Feed Stepper queue-ticket-dispenser-feed-motor 1 part
1.5 Paper Sensor queue-ticket-dispenser-paper-sensor 1 part
1.6 Printer Driver Board 5 parts queue-ticket-dispenser-printer-pcb 1 111 assembly
1.6.1 Bare PCB pcb-bare 1 part
1.6.2 Microcontroller mcu 1 part
1.6.3 Power MOSFET mosfet 4 part
1.6.4 SMD Passive (R/C/L) smd-passives 100× 100 part
1.6.5 Connector connector 5 part
2 Paper Roll Handling 4 parts queue-ticket-dispenser-paper 1 4 assembly
2.1 Roll Holder queue-ticket-dispenser-roll-holder 1 part
2.2 Thermal Paper Roll queue-ticket-dispenser-paper-roll 1 part
2.3 Low-Paper Sensor queue-ticket-dispenser-low-paper-sensor 1 part
2.4 Paper Path Guide queue-ticket-dispenser-paper-guide 1 part
3 Touchscreen Module 4 parts queue-ticket-dispenser-touchscreen 1 4 assembly
3.1 LCD Panel lcd-panel 1 part
3.2 Touch Digitizer touch-digitizer 1 part
3.3 LCD Driver Board queue-ticket-dispenser-lcd-driver 1 part
3.4 Screen Bezel queue-ticket-dispenser-screen-bezel 1 part
4 Embedded Controller 5 parts queue-ticket-dispenser-controller 1 166 assembly
4.1 Compute SoC Module soc-module 1 part
4.2 I/O Carrier Board 4 parts queue-ticket-dispenser-carrier-board 1 162 assembly
4.2.1 Bare PCB pcb-bare 1 part
4.2.2 SMD Passive (R/C/L) smd-passives 150× 150 part
4.2.3 Connector connector 8 part
4.2.4 Power MOSFET mosfet 3 part
4.3 Network Module queue-ticket-dispenser-network 1 part
4.4 Storage Module queue-ticket-dispenser-storage 1 part
4.5 Hardware Watchdog queue-ticket-dispenser-watchdog 1 part
5 Counter Display Interface 4 parts queue-ticket-dispenser-display-if 1 4 assembly
5.1 RS-485 Transceiver queue-ticket-dispenser-rs485 1 part
5.2 Display Protocol Controller queue-ticket-dispenser-display-ctrl 1 part
5.3 Relay relay 1 part
5.4 Wire Bundle wire-bundle 1 part
6 Kiosk Enclosure 5 parts queue-ticket-dispenser-enclosure 1 8 assembly
6.1 Sheet Metal Panel sheet-panel 4 part
6.2 Floor Pedestal queue-ticket-dispenser-pedestal 1 part
6.3 Service Door Lock queue-ticket-dispenser-service-lock 1 part
6.4 Ticket Chute queue-ticket-dispenser-ticket-chute 1 part
6.5 Fastener Set fastener-set 1 part
7 Power Subsystem 4 parts queue-ticket-dispenser-power 1 4 assembly
7.1 Power Supply power-supply 1 part
7.2 Surge & EMI Filter queue-ticket-dispenser-surge-filter 1 part
7.3 Thermal Fuse thermal-fuse 1 part
7.4 Wire Bundle wire-bundle 1 part
8 Speaker speaker 1 part

Sourcing — likely vendors

Companies that make this · indicative price $50–$15k · MOQ & lead are typical
VendorHQSpecialtyMOQLead time
🇯🇵Canon
canon.com ↗
Tokyo, JP Imaging & optics 500 units 8–12 wks
🇯🇵Ricoh
ricoh.com ↗
Tokyo, JP Office imaging 500 units 8–12 wks
🇺🇸Xerox
xerox.com ↗
Norwalk, US Printers & copiers 500 units 8–12 wks
🇯🇵Epson
epson.com ↗
Suwa, JP Printers & projectors 500 units 8–12 wks
🇯🇵Brother
brother.com ↗
Nagoya, JP Printers & sewing 500 units 8–12 wks

770-word article