Isn’t
That Special!
The growing diversity of consumer products is inspiring
many manufacturers to use specialized material handling equipment and
facilities. Here’s what to keep in mind if you’re considering such
an investment.
by Tom Andel, chief editor
Material handlers
are paying more attention to demographic trends these days. Of particular
interest are the “baby boomers.” First, this generation is getting
more health conscious. That means there’ll be a growing hunger for
higher-quality fresh and frozen foods. Boomers are also getting older. That
means there’ll be greater demand for a wider variety of pharmaceuticals
and convenience products.
Another trend
involves all consumers. They’re getting less patient. Boomers and all
their relatives want top-quality food and drugs when and where they need them
— preferably under one roof.
These trends are
leading to material handling challenges in many supply chains. Manual solutions
in plants and warehouses with specialized material handling requirements won’t
work as well any more. Regulations dictate how long employees can work in
refrigerated environments. And with the growing variety of stock keeping units
(SKUs) on both the drug and food sides, it’s getting harder to follow
guidelines for product segregation and environmental storage requirements.
That’s why automated material handling technology is being re-engineered
to work in some of the most demanding environments.
“In the food
industry there are many storage restrictions,” says Paul Pisarcik, senior
manager at Sedlak Management Consultants in Richfield, Ohio. “You
can’t put chicken above beef, and you can’t put chemicals above
anything else. Today’s warehouse management systems [WMS] and control
systems for automated conveyors and AS/RS are capable of maintaining those
kinds of restrictive storage requirements.”
AS/RS cranes and
conveyors are being equipped for frozen environments, incorporating specialized
bearings and lubricants. And where people are still used in those environments,
they’re increasingly using radio frequency data communication devices
designed for freezers.
“In the
standard frozen foods warehouse where pick lists are used, those picks are
usually done in total, with no updating of records until all picks have been
completed,” adds Tom Holmes, another Sedlak manager. “Ideally, a
picker should be updating inventory after each pick, but all those people want
to do is get out of that freezer. RF can give you better control and an audit
trail, resulting in a much higher quality pick.”
“Product
integrity and quality are so important to our clients that they are willing to
make sure that not only are picking and storage done in the freezer and cooler,
but that product staging is done there before it gets loaded on a route truck,”
agrees Dale Harmelink, a consultant with Tompkins Associates, Charlotte, North
Carolina. “Route trucks are now cooled before product is put in. Product
integrity and quality are important, and our customers are making sure
they’re building the space to be able to provide those qualities.”
Design considerations
Whether your
product requires super-cold or super-clean handling, equipment manufacturers
can help you engineer ways to minimize labor and maximize quality. Take ice
cream, for example. Slight variations in temperature during its trip through
the supply chain can have a drastic effect on quality. During post-production
handling in some facilities, you’ll find people trying to stack loads on
pallets in minus 20 degree temperatures. The alternative is to move the ice
cream into a warm center where it can be palletized and then go back into the
freezer. But this leads to partial thawing and re-freezing, which can have a
nasty effect on texture and freshness. Still, until OSHA started mandating
exposure limits in these atmospheres, manufacturers didn’t have much
incentive to get people out of their freezers.
Then new service
level demands and the technology to help meet them came along.
Tweaking technology
“Machinery
can do a faster, cleaner job with fewer personnel issues,” says Kurt
Lloyd, vice president of engineering for HK Systems, a supply chain solutions
provider. “As manufacturers start selling 50 million gallons of ice cream
a year, the availability of manpower and the OSHA issues make automation necessary.”
But you can’t
just put a regular machine in this environment. Pneumatics have to be
re-designed if they’re used at all, and special type steels and material
considerations have to be made. Plastic, PVC and other material have a
significantly different coefficient of thermal expansion than steel.
In other words, a
material handling device built in a 70 degree environment will be a different
size after a week in a blast freezer. According to Lloyd, plastic shrinks about
three times faster than steel, so if you have a plastic-covered guard in the
freezer, it could shrink to two-thirds the length of the steel — or it
will break or split.
You also sacrifice
machine speed in these environments. Equipment used in these atmospheres tends
to be more complicated, and since pneumatics are not freezer friendly, you end
up with more electronics on board. This calls for a higher-grade technician to
maintain the equipment. Is the cost worth the gain in product quality?
“The ROI is
less than a year when you figure the amount of manpower used in these
facilities,” Lloyd answers.
Rick Schau, freezer
maintenance supervisor for Wells’ Blue Bunny, wasn’t looking for
speed when he started working with HK to put an automatic palletizer in his
company’s freezer. The goal was consistent output and gradual elimination
of the human factor. Wells’ Blue Bunny has 32 ice cream production
machines and is in the process of interfacing a palletizer with two of them.
“We’re
concentrating on our five-quart sizes for our first palletizers because these
pails are our heavier products and we have two high-speed pail lines,”
Schau explains. “We’re having a lot of injuries with people
manually palletizing them. There are a lot of variables, like the weights, the
cold and the slick floors.”
As this issue of MHM goes to press, the new palletizer has yet
to prove itself in full production. Schau is still not sure how the
system’s pneumatics will work at -20 Fahrenheit.
“This is the
first time we’ve tried vacuum in a freezer,” he continues.
“We haven’t found any vacuum system rated below -20. We’re
using the vacuum for slip sheet handling. [If this doesn’t work] we may
have to re-engineer the design or come up with some different material.”
HK’s Kurt
Lloyd agrees that pneumatics can be a problem in a freezer, especially for
product turning.
“We’ve
always done turning pneumatically,” he says, “and there are eight
or nine different designs we tried, all with pluses and minuses. We’re
using an electronic turner here, first time it’s ever been tried. With
electronics we have smaller motors that are very quiet.”
Schau is partial to
the idea of using hydraulics. They worked for him in 1993 when he put an AS/RS
in the freezer. The only problem was, he used a heating system for the
hydraulics.
“Since we
eliminated the velocity fuses and heaters and went to flow controls, we
haven’t had a problem,” he says. “Velocity fuses plug up with
cold oil, so we now use flow control valves and hydraulic oil that meets the
specs of our temperature. We don’t have a problem running them
cold.”
Wells’ Blue
Bunny is also using two hydraulic vertical reciprocating conveyors (VRCs) from
Intek, along with several HK scissor lifts with pop-up stops for aligning
pallets on the conveyor system.
“We’re
looking at working with HK to put in a lot more conveyor, which will use
hydraulics,” Schau concludes.
Smooth out transitions
All the resources
put into material handling in the freezer can fly out the dock door if you
don’t pay as much attention to supply chain transitions. For example,
refrigerated trailers can be equipped with three temperature zones. If you use
the right warehouse management system (WMS), you can load the truck’s
zones so they can be picked by the driver when he gets to different locations
in a way that doesn’t degrade the product. James Tompkins, president of
Tompkins Associates, remembers how a client used to bulk pick out of the
freezer warehouse, bring the product to the 42-degree dock, pick what was
needed for that truckload and return the rest to the freezer.
“If we were
to suggest doing that today, the client would throw us out,” says
Tompkins. “The bar has been raised very high, and the software must allow
us to get that one particular portion of a frozen order delivered to the truck
at the exact right time, then get the refrigerated and dry portions out there
without having a 15-minute well. That’s more demanding than anything we
would find in a conventional dry environment.”
Maintaining
environmental control throughout an entire facility can be a waste of money.
One alternative for staging sensitive material is using carousels. These enable
the buffer storage of temperature- or contaminant-sensitive items without
having to maintain large refrigerated or clean-room environments.
“This
equipment is high density and can be horizontal or vertical,” says Ed
Romaine, Remstar International. “It requires a smaller area. Vertical
carousels can be refrigerated or frozen. You don’t have to build these
huge chill areas, which are expensive to maintain. Our equipment is portable
and modular, so you can put in a refrigerated shuttle, take it down and put it
back together again in a day or two.”
To handle full and
mixed pallet loads, horizontal carousels are being engineered to provide -20
degree environments for buffer storage.
In clean-room
applications, electronics manufacturers are using vertical carousels during the
manufacture and transfer of contaminant-sensitive wafer chips. The wafers are
stored in specialized containers that can hold $1 million in components.
“If a guy
drops one, it’s a heck of an oops,” Romaine says.
“That’s why we built a load port system that allows you to store
product in the carousel, which brings floor space savings, ergonomics and
productivity into the clean room.”
Evaluate
packaging and product
Sometimes special
handling requirements apply due to packaging rather than product. Geoff Sisco,
senior vice president of Gross & Associates, tells of a household goods
manufacturer that used a chemical-formed foam to encase one of its products.
The company was looking at building a very-narrow-aisle (VNA) high-bay facility
for storage.
“When we
started looking at the insurance rates and the manufacturer gave information
about the packaging, it turned out the material had a higher hazard rating than
Styrofoam and would require the installation of a sophisticated sprinkler
system in the building,” Sisco explains. “By changing over to
Styrofoam, it got a lower rating and allowed them to use ceiling sprinklers with
only two levels of rack sprinklers rather than five. Over the long term it
turned out to be cheaper to change the packaging.”
Project tips
If you’ve
recently been plunged into the world of specialized material handling, whether
through a new job assignment or because your company acquired a new line of
temperature- or environmentally sensitive products, Sisco offers the following
pointers to make your job easier:
• If
you’ve re-located to a community where regulatory groups are very strict,
find a local engineer or other authority who knows how to work with these
groups.
• If
you’re putting material handling equipment into refrigerated or freezer
environments, find out what effect these special conditions will have on
product warranties. Will specialized maintenance schedules be required? Do
special installation upcharges apply?
• If
you’re doing a retrofit in a hazmat building, tools might have to be
explosion-proof, or air-driven rather than electrically driven. That can be a
cost issue.
• If
you’re handling frozen, dry and iced products, you may have to buy
tractor trailers with three different temperature compartments.
• Look for a
WMS that can keep a product master, and from that master, zone your slotting
assignments.
Paul F.
O’Connell, president of Operations Concepts Inc., Cherry Hill, New
Jersey, offers a few more:
• Make sure
material handling equipment has been proven in the type of specialized
environment you’re designing. That goes for pallet jacks, RF scanners,
all the way through network cabling and connections.
“Most pallet
jacks are grease lubricated, and once they’ve been in the frozen
environment too long, the grease no longer lubricates,” O’Connell
adds.
• Do
benchmarking via site surveys.
• If
you’re building a new frozen foods facility, never face your bay doors to
the south because that’s where the sun will always shine, and if
you’re letting heat in the building all day, your electrical bill will be
sky-high. Don’t leave the coolant tower exposed to the sun either.
Shelter it.
• Learn to
crossdock. Every time you open the freezer door you lose money.
• For
hazardous material, use a WMS capable of receiving and sending advance shipping
notices and Material Safety Data Sheets. It should also be able to archive
using a data server for producing audit trail reports.
Applications for
specially engineered material handling equipment in cold and clean environments
are multiplying, thanks to the variety of foods and consumer packaged goods
entering the market every day. Potential inventory turns and equipment
utilization can tell you whether any new investments in that technology should
come out of your pocket or that of an experienced third-party logistics
provider. MHM
Going Underground Is Cool
It costs a lot to
protect warehoused food products from temperature and humidity extremes as well
as pest infestation — above ground. But in the central U.S., those
protections come naturally with underground warehousing. Several contract
warehousing providers lease storage space in underground chambers originally
carved out as a result of limestone mining in this region.
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