Properly photographing a 3.5" floppy disk for archival is annoyingly complicated. The label has THREE sides!
I've already built an automated system to take a picture of the front of a disk, but really I need to take THREE photos if I want to get the whole thing.
That means either three cameras or I need to rotate the disk 90° and then 180°, which is going to really stress the limits of my mechanical engineering skills.
So the front is easy. The disk slides down a slide, it's stopped by a servo, I take a picture with a camera aimed down at it.
The back... Either I flip the disk, or I have a camera under the disk which takes a picture aimed up.
And the edge is the worst. I can't have a camera aimed at it unless I either move the camera out of the way of the disk, or I make the disk move in an L shape
If I can rotate the disk sideways I might be able to solve the edge problem. Then I could just have a second camera that aims at the edge.
I could rotate it sideways with some static obstacles, but I may need a servo mechanism or something to do a 180 flip to get the back, unless I do the transparent glass thing.
The disk comes out, it whacks into a bumper and rotates 90° sideways, and three separate cameras photograph it at once, then something ejects it?
The best designed option would probably be a sort of carrier that rotates. It'd have to grab the disk by the edges, but if it could move the disk from the original orientation, to 90° for the edge pic, then 180° for the back pic, it could then rotate to like 270° to drop the disk.
That might be the most reasonable option.
It would require variable focus on the camera, since the surface it's photographing is closer for the edge picture.