Engineering for Throughput
by Christopher Trunk,
managing editor
Conveyor sortation and singulation are flying faster with
new technology to meet today’s production demands.
“When thinking about
sorters, you have to remember they are just one engineered component of a
sortation system,” says Stephen Legg, director of marketing for FKI
Logistex Automation Division (formerly Buschman and Mathews conveyor
companies). “A sorter is like the second hand on a watch. It moves the
most, but you need the other two hands to complete the job. That includes the
induction, merge, singulation, sort and aftersort.”
Sortation conveyors use
either tilt trays, tubes, pusher shoes, wheels or belts to sort cartons to
various shipping lanes to fill customer orders or route goods by ZIP code, etc.
Singulators take cartons that are dumped onto a conveyor and make them single
file. Once in single file, metering belt conveyors can set a precise gap
between packages using powered belts and photoeyes, as well as set the speed of
a package to match that of the sortation system.
New technology for
accomplishing sorts and singulation is increasing speed to new thresholds for
faster production.
Engineering new technology
The Unisort XV from FKI
Logistex Auto-mation Division is an all-electric, flat-slat sorter. It uses
mechanical crossover switches for left and right diverts as well as electric
switches, which replace bulkier pneumatic switches. This miniaturization allows
the sorter to more densely pack sorting doors at just 4-foot centers rather
than the typical 12-foot centers. This makes a big difference in system size
and cost when, for example, you are a postal or parcel carrier with 150 sorting
doors.
The newest shoe sorters can
run up to 550 to 650 fpm. “At those fast speeds, the physics of how air
currents affect small packages becomes important, as does changes to the
geometry of conveyor diverts. It’s not difficult for light items to take
flight at those speeds,” says Legg.
When you get into very
high-speed distribution, more than 175 cartons/minute, you’re pushing
that conveyor pretty hard, and products tend to creep up on one another,
becoming side-by-sides.
To solve that problem a few
years ago, the Buschman Company released the VHS Wedge product for high-speed
lanes. The product is still offered and is installed at more sites now. It
accumulates products and then releases them together in trains at very high
speed. “With this technology, you can eliminate side-by-sides and
increase speeds to above 220 cartons/minute,” reports Legg.
Crisplant has designed a
number of AutoPack chutes. The principle behind the AutoPack chute is that
product that has been discharged by the cross-belt or tilt-tray is
automatically diverted into a shipping carton or container. The AutoPack design further reduces the
labor required to process orders.
The Hytrol Conveyor Company
offers the ProSort family of three sorters:
• ProSort 100, a
small-item sliding shoe sorter. It handles 50-lb-and-under loads and items as
small as a CD.
• ProSort 200,
heavy-duty sliding shoe sorter used in warehouse and distribution centers. It
handles more than 100-lb product at rates of 200 cartons/minute.
• ProSort SC. New for
later this year, the ProSort SC is a pivot-wheel diverter that sorts from 100
to 120 items/minute. It is an economical sorter as compared to sliding shoe
sorters. It lets you sort to one side or to both sides.
Hytrol also offers its
Viper Sort machine to let retail distributors sort everything from lip gloss to
baby formula for many stores orders. The machine sorts orders into pack lines.
Roach Manufacturing
Corporation offers a SmartZone accumulation conveyor with photoeye technology.
“The photoeyes allow the conveyor to be either a singulation or slug
release machine,” says Charlie Parks, vice president of sales and
engineering for Roach.
“Sortation is
becoming more intelligent,” says Steve McElweenie, executive vice
president of sales and marketing for Crisplant, a division of FKI Logistex. He
says that sortation software is offering customers more information, including
better reporting on individual inputs and workers doing induction or packing
functions. “Buyers are concerned about shrinkage, and now we can scan a
worker’s ID into a particular sortation chute and audit the flow of goods
past that responsible worker,” McElweenie says.
Vision systems are the
latest in singulation conveyor technology. The vision system takes a snapshot
of a jumbled mass of parcels or cartons. With a PC controlling the power and
speed of a conveyor section, either rollers, slats or belts are used in the
singulator to untangle the packages.
Retrofitting versus new systems
Retrofitting is more
prevalent in singulation than in sortation. “The reason why singulators
are retrofitted into sortation systems is that side-by-side items are making
their way onto tilt-tray sorters,” says Bryan Boyce, product manager for
case conveyor products for Alvey Systems Inc. Another reason is to relieve the
concentration of workers who are placing items onto an induction conveyor.
Without a singulator, workers must always orient boxes precisely on conveyors
the right way, with no boxes side-by-side. “Singulators take away the
need for precise work from people more concerned about unloading a stack of
boxes onto the conveyor,” says Boyce.
Alvey takes a section out
of an infeed conveyor and installs a new singulator to improve performance of a
sortation system so the wrong side-by-side items aren’t diverted to a
customer’s order lane. “We typically install singulators on new
systems to guarantee upfront design performance,” adds Boyce.
For Legg, most sortation
business is in new systems, not retrofitting, and for good reason. “The
sorter is like the spine of a system. To take it out and put in a new one
requires shutting down the operation, and that’s a difficult proposition
for customers,” says Legg. Typically, a new sorter is installed alongside
an old one, or a second sorter is stacked on top of the first with new controls
and aftersort lanes added.
But Legg warns about users
with sorters that run now at 130 cartons/minute wanting to increase to 200
cartons/minute. There’s always a faster sorter that can be installed, but
the whole sortation system may have to be reconfigured as well. “It means
installing a new merge that can meet those rates and making significant
retrofits to controls and speed changers. Given this, sometimes it is more
expensive to upgrade the merge conveyor than the sorter itself,” observes
Legg.
Sortation trends and applications
“A few years ago, the
normal range for sorting product was at 60 to 120 fpm,” says Parks,
“but now that range is from 120 to 200 cartons per minute, extending to
conveyor speeds of 300 to 500 fpm.”
Add to that the complexity
of more cases broken into smaller sizes and lighter-weight boxes, says Boyce.
“There’s a great number of SKUs or carton sizes now, and a lot more
shrinkwrapped containers. This all changes the way product must be
handled,” says Boyce.
Parks says that the variety
of product being conveyed and sorted includes large, 15-foot rolls of carpet
and six-foot-long and 60-inch-wide rolls of fabric. “Any time you are
conveying rolled goods,” says Parks, “you have to build in safety
valves just to keep the product on top of the conveyor.” Roach
specializes in engineering conveyor and sortation systems for awkward,
difficult-to-handle items. Now Roach can handle from six to eight rolls of big
carpet or fabric a minute. Other hard-to-handle items include tires and jig
fixtures used to assemble products.
In the beverage industry,
product is single-filed into carousels or other kinds of storage buffers to
create “rainbow loads” or loads of mixed SKUs intended for one
store order. Boyce says sorters are used to create these palletloads of mixed
goods prior to shipment.
A major trend for sortation
use is for zone skipping, when shipments are sorted into ZIP codes that match
the areas served by various postal or common carrier hubs across the United
States. “Users are looking to sorters to accomplish these zone skips with
payback being less than a year on money saved through skipping,” says
Legg. He says that in the past, it was typically tilt-tray or cross-belt
sorters that handled zone skipping, but now the Automation Division’s
Multisort XV shoe sorter can handle this task, too.
The drive for faster
conveyor is also moving into conveyor manufacturing. The need to supply product
within 24 hours of placing an order has driven some companies to high-tech,
high-speed manufacturing techniques. Parks says, “We now use laser metal-cutting
technology, a one-of-a-kind structural punching and cut-off machine that is
designed for manufacturing conveyor,” says Parks, Roach has also
installed an automatic fabrication system that punches, shears, sorts and
retrieves components. This all supports his company’s program in which 35
percent of total shipments are made within 24 hours.
Don’ts for sortation and singulation
Sources have seen a lot of
avoidable mistakes and offer this advice:
Steve McElweenie. Don’t short yourself on the time needed to properly
engineer a sortation system. If you rush, all you get is a standard offering.
Ask the customer to name 10 problems with the current operation and make sure
you evaluate all 10 for major impact on the sortation system design.
Bryan Boyce. Don’t short yourself on testing. Set up a singulator
and ask the vendor to run your product over it to ensure the product rotation
is correct and that there are no hang-ups. It will also tell you what the
throughput can be.
Boyce Bonham, manager of The Technology Center for Hytrol Conveyor
Company. Don’t buy based solely on dollar cost for a system that meets
today’s needs. Design your new sortation system for expected growth using
variable speed drives that handle today’s and tomorrow’s needs.
Variable speed drives also help handle peak and off-season throughput changes.
Stephen Legg. Don’t forget the aftersort. With packages coming off
the sorter at high speed, do you want to maintain the package orientation, keep
the label facing up or perform a secondary sort? Give a lot of study to the
speed transition point for packages moving off the sorter into the accumulation
zone.
Armed with this advice and
new information on this technology, you’ll be able to make a better sort
yourself between vendors offering these engineered systems. MHM
Cubing and Weighing Add Accuracy and Revenues
Quantronix has announced
the new CubiScan 200-TL for dimensioning goods at high speeds. Also announced
is the new FreightWeigh System that works in tandem with sortation systems to
more than triple the throughput of conventional in-line scales. It works at
speeds of up to 561 fe