Reprinted
from Modern Materials Handling February 1, 2005
Big
rolls, big savings
By
Bob Trebilcock, Editor at Large
An automatic sortation
system produces big savings for Owens Corning.
Fiberglass
insulation plants operate 24/7. To keep up with production at the packaging
line in its facility in Waxahachie, Texas, Owens Corning used to have
operators manually feed insulation rolls into five retail bagging
machines.
That
all changed when the insulation maker implemented a sliding shoe sorter
system (Automotion,
708-229-3700), one component of a larger automation project which is
producing up to $1 million a year in savings.
"With
the sortation system, we were able to automate the process and eliminate the
need for manual packing," says Rob Kramer, a project engineer for Owens
Corning. "That freed up operators and reduced our maintenance
upkeep."
In
the old system, banded rolls of insulation were fed by hand into one of the
five machines where they were packaged in a poly bag.
Today,
rolled and banded insulation is automatically fed onto a conveyor system. As
the rolls travel down the conveyor, the operator has three options: rolls
can be force fed to one of two automated packaging machines; the system can
be programmed to alternate between the two machines; or the operator can
bypass both machines and send the roll to a manual packaging station at the
end of the conveyor line.
The
sortation conveyor travels at 200 feet per minute, and can easily sort 18
rolls per minute.
Intelligence
was built into the system so that if one of the packaging lines goes down,
the system can automatically feed the machine with the empty magazine. The
operator also has an override switch that allows him to choose any of the
options.
Although
the rolls measure 20- to 23-inches in diameter, Kramer says the shoe sorters
have no trouble diverting them. "The sortation conveyor can handle
rolls bunched together, just like it can pull/sort an individual box in a
distribution center," Kramer says.
Once
diverted, rolls are conveyed to an accumulation area before they are
automatically fed into the packaging machine.
In
addition to the savings produced by the system, Kramer believes automated
sortation has created a safer working environment. "From a safety
aspect, we've eliminated jobs that were ergonomically challenging,"
Kramer says. "Machines are doing those tasks now."
©
2005, Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights
Reserved.