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Self-Checkout Kiosk Product

Overview

A self-checkout kiosk compresses a staffed checkout lane into a pedestal the shopper operates alone: scan, bag, pay. The hardware is a sensor-dense Chassis & Counters whose two scales and a camera exist mostly to answer one question — does what left the store match what was paid for? One attendant typically supervises four to six lanes from a station fed by each kiosk's Status Light Pole.

Scanning

The heart is the Scanner-Scale, a bi-optic imager of the same family used at staffed lanes. Two camera engines — the Horizontal Imager behind the counter window and the Vertical Imager in the tower — view the item through mirror paths from multiple angles at once, so a barcode is read in any orientation in a single sweep. Each engine pairs an CMOS Image Sensor with fixed Lens Assembly optics; the Decode Board fuses the views and decodes 1D and 2D symbologies in under 100 ms. The Scan Window glass carries a sapphire-hard coating because shoppers drag cans across it all day.

Produce has no barcode, so the counter window doubles as a scale: the Scale Load Cell is legal-for-trade (OIML R76 / NTEP), weighing to 2 g over 15 kg, and the shopper picks the item from a lookup screen. Scanning an item also passes it over the EAS Deactivator, which kills the 8.2 MHz security label so the exit gates stay quiet.

Weight verification

The original anti-theft mechanism is the Bagging Scale. The bagging shelf floats on four Bagging Load Cell units summed by a 24-bit Scale ADC Board; when an item is scanned, the system expects the platform weight to rise by that item's database weight within a tolerance band. No change, or the wrong change, triggers the famous "unexpected item in the bagging area" intervention and lights the status pole. The mechanism is effective but generates false interventions — shoppers leaning on the Bag Rack, bags shifting — so modern systems widen tolerances and lean more on vision.

That vision layer is the Security & Loss Prevention stack: the Overhead Camera watches hands and items across the scan and bagging zones, and the Vision Module runs edge inference to flag non-scans (item passed around the scanner), barcode switching (cheap code stuck on an expensive item), and items left in the trolley. Flags route to the attendant rather than blocking the lane, keeping throughput up.

Payment

Card payment is isolated by design. The Card Terminal is a sealed PCI PTS device doing EMV chip, contactless, and PIN entry internally; the kiosk's POS Computer only ever sees an approved/declined token, so the lane stays out of PCI DSS card-data scope.

Cash lanes add recyclers rather than simple acceptors. The Note Recycler stores common denominations in drums and pays them back out as change; the Coin Recycler singulates, validates, and sorts coins into payout hoppers. Recycling cuts cash-in-transit visits sharply because tendered cash becomes the change float. The devices sit behind the alarmed Cash Compartment Door, separate from the Service Door used for paper and PC access.

The Receipt Printer finishes the transaction: the Thermal Printhead prints at up to 300 mm/s on thermal stock from the drop-in Paper Bucket, and the Auto-Cutter frees the slip.

System integration

The Controller PC runs the self-checkout application on a fanless PC against the store's POS server — prices, the EAN/weight database, promotions, loyalty, and age-restriction rules all come from the same backend as staffed lanes. Age-restricted items lock the transaction until an attendant approves at the lane or remotely. Peripherals hang off the powered Powered USB Hub, and the Mini UPS carries the lane through power dips so transactions never end half-committed.

The shopper-facing surface is the Touchscreen Head — an LCD Panel with projected-capacitive Touch Digitizer in a sealed Display Housing, with voice prompts through a Speaker. UI design is heavily standardised across fleets because every extra prompt measurably slows the lane; a typical basket of 15 items clears in about 90 seconds with an experienced user.

Mechanically the lane must weigh accurately on imperfect floors, which is why the Levelling Foot matter more than they look: both scales are calibrated after levelling, and trading-standards inspectors verify the scanner scale annually in most jurisdictions.

Build & assembly graph

expand / collapse · shared sub-assemblies converge · links to related products · est. labour
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Bill of materials

9 top-level lines · 50 rows shown · 56 parts total · indented to 3 levels
# Item / sub-assembly Part no. Qty/assy Ext. qty Parts Type
1 Scanner-Scale 7 parts self-checkout-kiosk-scanner-scale 1 10 assembly
1.1 Horizontal Imager self-checkout-kiosk-imager-h 1 part
1.2 Vertical Imager self-checkout-kiosk-imager-v 1 part
1.3 Decode Board self-checkout-kiosk-scan-decoder 1 part
1.4 Scale Load Cell self-checkout-kiosk-weigh-cell 1 part
1.5 Scan Window self-checkout-kiosk-scan-window 2 part
1.6 CMOS Image Sensor image-sensor 2 part
1.7 Lens Assembly camera-lens 2 part
2 Bagging Scale 5 parts self-checkout-kiosk-bagging-scale 1 8 assembly
2.1 Bagging Platform self-checkout-kiosk-bag-platform 1 part
2.2 Bagging Load Cell self-checkout-kiosk-bag-load-cell 4 part
2.3 Bag Rack self-checkout-kiosk-bag-rack 1 part
2.4 Scale ADC Board self-checkout-kiosk-scale-adc 1 part
2.5 Fastener Set fastener-set 1 part
3 Touchscreen Head 5 parts self-checkout-kiosk-touchscreen 1 5 assembly
3.1 LCD Panel lcd-panel 1 part
3.2 Touch Digitizer touch-digitizer 1 part
3.3 Display Housing self-checkout-kiosk-display-housing 1 part
3.4 Status Light Pole self-checkout-kiosk-status-pole 1 part
3.5 Speaker speaker 1 part
4 Payment Module 5 parts self-checkout-kiosk-payment 1 5 assembly
4.1 Card Terminal self-checkout-kiosk-card-terminal 1 part
4.2 Note Recycler self-checkout-kiosk-note-recycler 1 part
4.3 Coin Recycler self-checkout-kiosk-coin-recycler 1 part
4.4 Cash Compartment Door self-checkout-kiosk-cash-vault-door 1 part
4.5 Wire Bundle wire-bundle 1 part
5 Receipt Printer 4 parts self-checkout-kiosk-receipt-printer 1 4 assembly
5.1 Thermal Printhead self-checkout-kiosk-printhead 1 part
5.2 Auto-Cutter self-checkout-kiosk-auto-cutter 1 part
5.3 Paper Bucket self-checkout-kiosk-paper-bucket 1 part
5.4 Microcontroller mcu 1 part
6 Security & Loss Prevention 5 parts self-checkout-kiosk-security 1 5 assembly
6.1 Overhead Camera self-checkout-kiosk-overhead-camera 1 part
6.2 Vision Module self-checkout-kiosk-cv-module 1 part
6.3 EAS Deactivator self-checkout-kiosk-eas-deactivator 1 part
6.4 CMOS Image Sensor image-sensor 1 part
6.5 Lens Assembly camera-lens 1 part
7 Controller PC 5 parts self-checkout-kiosk-controller 1 5 assembly
7.1 POS Computer self-checkout-kiosk-pos-pc 1 part
7.2 Powered USB Hub self-checkout-kiosk-io-hub 1 part
7.3 Mini UPS self-checkout-kiosk-ups 1 part
7.4 Compute SoC Module soc-module 1 part
7.5 Wire Bundle wire-bundle 1 part
8 Chassis & Counters 5 parts self-checkout-kiosk-chassis 1 13 assembly
8.1 Sheet Metal Panel sheet-panel 5 part
8.2 Input Shelf self-checkout-kiosk-input-shelf 1 part
8.3 Service Door self-checkout-kiosk-service-doors 2 part
8.4 Levelling Foot self-checkout-kiosk-leveling-feet 4 part
8.5 Fastener Set fastener-set 1 part
9 Power Supply power-supply 1 part

Sourcing — likely vendors

Companies that make this · indicative price $1k–$30k · MOQ & lead are typical
VendorHQSpecialtyMOQLead time
cranems.com ↗ Williston, US Vending machines 50 units 10–16 wks
🇪🇸Azkoyen
azkoyen.com ↗
Peralta, ES Vending & payment 50 units 10–16 wks
fujielectric.com ↗ Tokyo, JP Vending & power electronics 50 units 10–16 wks
sanden-rs.com ↗ Isesaki, JP Vending & retail systems 50 units 10–16 wks
🇨🇳TCN Vending
tcnvend.com ↗
Changsha, CN Vending machines 50 units 10–16 wks

807-word article