> A non-standard orientation can cause issues with pick-and-place machinery, which usually will handle 90 degrees fine, and _often_ 45 degrees fine
This sounds like nonsense. Pick and place machines don't pick up components perfectly deterministically. There is always a tilt and an offset when you are picking the part up, which is why a computer vision system has to account for part orientation and the center of the part. The machine must compensate the error by moving and rotating the part accordingly.
This sounds like nonsense. Pick and place machines don't pick up components perfectly deterministically. There is always a tilt and an offset when you are picking the part up, which is why a computer vision system has to account for part orientation and the center of the part. The machine must compensate the error by moving and rotating the part accordingly.