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Conveyor Applications
Keeping the Productivity Commitment New product-flow system is engineered to help Ken's Foods meet ongoing goal of peak operating productivity.
But the Marlboro, Mass.-based company is more than holding its own. Ken's Foods has enjoyed double-digit growth for a number of years now and has some aggressive expansion plans for the future. The company's commitment to peak productivity can be seen at its production and distribution center in Marlboro. The 310,000 square-foot facility features advanced computer controls, touch screen technology, and the latest in palletization equipment. And streamlining the flow of product throughout that facility is a series of integrated conveyors from Hytrol. The installation was completed in January 2000, fully automating what had been a largely manual operation. "We were hand palletizing the cases from gravity conveyors located at the end of our production lines," says David A. Muskopf, the company's vice president of engineering. "With the new installation we've become more productive, and we're making more effective use of our people." The Ken's Foods engineering team worked closely with Stokes Material Handling Systems of Doylestown, Pa., in designing and implementing the installation. Stokes is an experienced systems integrator and distributor of Hytrol conveyor equipment. A Streamlined Flow The installation was engineered for simplicity, reliability, and efficiency. There are four product-flow lines-two for retail and two for food service, which are the main customer categories. The retail product is packaged in glass or plastic bottles. The food service items come mainly in one-gallon plastic containers.
The
cases make this journey swiftly and safely. Brake belts engineered into
the system keep the cases from accumulating on the curves. "This was
a cost effective way of assuring that product flowed smoothly while
maximizing case density in the accumulation sections," says Neal
Feigles, the project manager for Stokes. In short, the product flow is clean, simple, and direct. There's no unnecessary steps or wasted motion. Supporting a Growth Track Not a single day of production was lost during the entire installation process. Stokes closely coordinated its activity with Ken's Foods, taking maximum advantage of third shifts and weekends.
"It was a smooth installation and really painless from our side," says Engineering VP Muskopf. "And we got the results we were looking for." The key result: The capability to move close to 400,000 thousand cases a week out of Marlboro without a hitch. In fact, the installation went so well that Ken's Foods is replicating it at the company's production facility in McDonough, Georgia. The same types of conveyors and palletizers are being used, and Stokes Material Handling Systems is in charge of systems integration. In the near future, Ken's Foods will break ground on a new production-distribution complex to serve the western states. And as the growth track continues, Ken's Foods plans to continually seek that productivity edge-in its conveyors and in every other part of the operation. The Ken's Foods Installation
Company: Ken's Foods Facility: Production and Distribution Center Location: Marlboro, MA Size: 310,000 square feet Employees: Approx. 350 V.P.-Engineering: David A. Muskopf Product handled: Salad dressing, mayonnaise, sauces Throughput: 375,000-400,000 cases per week Types of conveyors: Hytrol: Horizontal power (190 ACC), belt (TA), chain-driven live roller (25 CRA), heavy-duty merge (LRA), gravity. Ryson: Spiral. Palletizer: Columbia/Jaffco Packaging Machinery Conveyor supplier: Hytrol Conveyor Inc., Jonesboro, AR Systems Integrator: Stokes Material Handling Systems (Doylestown, PA)
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When you're in a business as hotly competitive
as the one Ken's Foods is in, you have to maximize productivity in every
aspect of your operation. As the country's biggest privately held
manufacturer of salad dressings, Ken's Foods competes with some of the
biggest names in the food industry.
The cases are sealed and labeled in their
respective production areas-retail or food service. They move from the
discharge lines in production onto spiral conveyors manufactured by Ryson.
The spiral units bring the cases up to horizontal power conveyors, which
transport the product from the production area into the distribution
center and to the palletizers.
Sealed and labeled cases move
from the retail and food service production areas up the spiral conveyors
and onto horizontal power conveyors. Two foods service lines run in
parallel above two retail lines into the distribution center. Brake belts
engineered into the system keep cases from jamming in the curves. The
retail lines feed two dedicated palletizers. The food service lines merge
into one palletizer line. After pallets are built, they are discharged
onto chain-driven rollers. Pallets move through stretch wrappers and then
to end of line. Forklifts transport the pallets to shipment staging area.