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Innovative New Machinery at PACK EXPO International

PMG editors fanned out across PACK EXPO International in October in search of packaging innovation. Here's what they found in machinery.

Photo 1—Accraply
Photo 1—Accraply

Accraply, a BW Packaging company, and the Intelligent Systems team at Barry-Wehmiller have collaborated on a new human machine interface (HMI) for Accraply’s labeling systems that is developed to provide greater insight into labeling operations for increased overall plant productivity.

Designed with ease of operation and training in mind, the SmartLink HMI features video tutorials and on-demand training guides to simplify set up and operation. On-board manuals, drawings, and consumable parts ordering enable the operator to find information and submit parts orders. Additionally, self-diagnosing software helps educate operators on faults and assists them in troubleshooting.

To improve labeling machine efficiency, the SmartLink HMI creates preventive maintenance schedules for the operator and maintenance team that display daily, weekly, and monthly tasks. The HMI’s improved analytics dashboards provide information regarding the machine’s availability, performance, and condition to increase operation uptime. The HMI technology has also been designed to accommodate rapid changeovers by storing recipes and providing video changeover guides to assist operators and reduce downtime. Photo 2—BellatRxPhoto 2—BellatRx

Allowing for greater interface capabilities, the system’s SmartLink interface allows plant management to leverage HMI technology in front of the machine or remotely; remote machine access can be reached through a smart tablet or phone. Accraply also offers machine configuration and a setup audit trail to ensure the product is working correctly as well as remote video assistance from a trained local support team through the customer’s smart device.

Among the Accraply machines currently using the new SmartLink HMI are the Sirius 100 pressure-sensitive labeling system and the Sirius MK6 (1) advanced pharmaceutical-grade labeler.

Elsewhere at PACK EXPO International, BellatRx introduced a new Notaris Plus labeling machine (2) that includes a component that takes the measurements of a bottle. When these are entered into the HMI, a recipe is created automatically that contains all of the conveyors, label dispensing, wrap, and metering wheel speeds necessary. So all of these are automatically set and synchronized without further operator intervention. This gets the operator to 90% of where the setup needs to be just by measuring the bottle. “They don’t need to understand dispense speed or any of that because we understand it, and we write in the code and algorithms to calculate the speeds,” explains BellatRx President and CEO Alan Shuhaibar. “All they need to do is measure the bottle and enter the dimensions.”

A short animation or video also serves as a step-by-step guide in the HMI on how to get the BellatRx labeler up and running. The video is coupled with an LED light strip installed along the length of the machine. When setup is required on a certain assembly, the section of the LED strip in front of that assembly will light up to draw the operator’s attention to that point. The mechanical adjustments include electronic feedback that turns the LED light green when it is in the correct setpoint or red when it is not. On the HMI, the operator cannot progress to the next screen unless all setpoints for that assembly are green.

In the past, the OEM’s expectation was that the operator knew how to set up the machines. But that’s no longer true in many cases. In addition, people expect the same user-friendly interface as an iPhone. “We are trying to take that mindset and put it into the machines. You shouldn’t need a PhD to run a labeler,” Shuhaibar says.Photo 3—NitaPhoto 3—Nita

Watch a video of the new Notaris labeler in action at the BellatRx PACK EXPO booth.

Also featuring automated changeover on a labeling machine, thanks to the power of servo technology, was Nita Labeling Systems. VP Sales and Marketing Ken Hubscher showed how quickly and automatically the Nita labeler (3) goes from applying front and back labels on an F-style container to applying a full-wrap label on round containers.

Watch a PACK EXPO video demonstration.

Suitable for e-commerce

Weber Packaging Solutions used PACK EXPO International to unveil its latest label printer/applicator, Model 4050, designed with distribution centers and e-commerce operations in mind. Based on a version of a Weber machine created by its engineers in Germany, Model 4050 (4) is engineered to be a modular, variable-height labeling system that is easy to service while using 80% less air than comparable systems.

Weber’s machine combines modulated vacuum technology with integrated sensors that constantly measure the labeling pressure required and adjust as needed during the labeling operation. Chris Erbach, integrated marketing manager at Weber Packaging Solutions, says this technology should make the 4050 appealing to distribution centers and e-commerce businesses who need variable-height labeling solutions to accurately handle the packages and envelopes coming in sequence down the line.

Photo 4—Weber PackagingPhoto 4—Weber Packaging“For anyone doing shipping address labeling for different sized packages, this model will sense the height of the box, and bring it down to a quarter of an inch and blow the label on from there,” says Erbach. “It’s a sort of a hybrid—not completely air-free label application, but it uses significantly less air than what is typical in the industry.”

Two compressed air circuits allow the label to stay on the tamp pad and the thruster to stay in position when an emergency stop occurs on the production line. This eliminates the need to reset the applicator when the emergency is cleared and the line restarts. Because it is a no-contact labeling system, Model 4050 can also handle fragile items and even do product labeling, Erbach says.

In addition to its sensor-based variable-height labeling technology, Model 4050 features variable-stroke operation and increased precision with powered unwind and rewind modules that minimize wear on the printing modules while ensuring precise printing. The 13.75-in. unwind matches the label length and ribbon length for one-to-one media consumption, thereby reducing downtime and eliminating partial changeovers.

Erbach explained to Packaging World at the show how modularity and simplicity are built into the design of the 4050. “We wanted something that was more modular with parts that we could source here in the U.S. to be cost-effective,” says Erbach. Featuring a labeling module designed without service parts, Model 4050 is easy to adapt to applications and service, he adds. The only maintenance item—the print engine—can be maintained per the manufacturer’s requirements. Print engines from all leading manufacturers can be used in the Model 4050.Photo 5—Chicago Tag and LabelPhoto 5—Chicago Tag and Label

Another advantage for busy distribution centers: the labeler’s clear cover over the pneumatic system makes it easy to see and access for operation, servicing, and cleaning. There are two separate compressed air cycles: one for safety-relevant processes such as moving the tamp, and one for general functions such as label management. Color-coded tubing and LED indicators make it easy to follow the action in busy facilities.

Available in right- or left-hand application models, Model 4050 can be configured to handle thermal-transfer or direct thermal label applications, Erbach says. Other standard features on the Model 4050 include a 7-in. LCD color touchscreen for easy operation and diagnostics.

E-commerce was also a focus at the PACK EXPO booth of Chicago Tag & Label, where two new labeling solutions for packaging and e-commerce were unveiled (5). Both are part of the Multiplex line of machines, which print and create packing slips and other crucial shipping documents at the same time a shipping label is created, saving valuable time and labor in the process.

The Multiplex comes in two variations: one is an auto-application system that applies all shipping documents directly to packages as they pass on a conveyor. The second version prints all documents for manual application to individual packages as needed.

“Once applied to the carton, you can peel the tear strips to reveal the packing list that’s covered by the outbound shipping labels,” says Ann Peterson, sales account executive at Chicago Tag & Label. “It could also have a return label that’s already applied to the carton ready for the end user to put back in the mail to be returned to the customer.”

Watch a video of Peterson demonstrating both machines at PACK EXPO International.

Case erecting and packing

Photo 6—DelkorPhoto 6—DelkorThe new Trayfecta X Series case erector (6) was the star of Delkor’s PACK EXPO International booth. Unique is a dual-magazine case blank setup that lets the machine hold up to 500 case blanks at a time. It accepts Delkor’s Cabrio tray/hood Retail Ready Package, stackable club-store style display trays, and standard brown box shippers—all at speeds to 50 cases/min. Included is Delkor’s patented case-forming technology as well as smart-machine technology to automatically correct for nonconforming corrugated blanks. Finally, the machine can be joined up monobloc-style with Delkor’s robotic loaders or Delkor’s Performance Series case packers.

Watch a video of the machine in action.

SOMIC Packaging showed off the advantages of retail-ready automation with its 424 W3 wraparound case packer (7) in Lakeside Center. But the company’s message about flexibility wasn’t only about using standard functional groups to make it easier to reconfigure operations; it also came in the form of a new strategy for servicing U.S. customers.

In the past year, SOMIC Packaging has begun commissioning all its North American machines from its headquarters in Eagan, Minn. Engineering and design of the packaging machines will continue at the SOMIC parent company in Germany, explains Peter Fox, CEO of SOMIC Packaging. Seven German colleagues are staying in the U.S. right now to cross-train employees to make sure that the commissioning is done from Eagan exactly how it was previously done from Germany, Fox adds.

Besides the convenience of commissioning machines for the North American market out of the Minnesota location—saving time and money with a local staff—it takes a lot of the pressure away from the current climate of uncertainty in the shipping world, Fox notes. It also helps with the workload in Germany.Photo 7—SOMICPhoto 7—SOMIC

“The volume coming out of North America has been putting additional pressure on our manufacturing in Germany,” Fox says. SOMIC Packaging absorbing commissioning responsibilities should go a long way as local sales continue to grow. “We anticipate that SOMIC Packaging will account for 50% of the volume within the next four years.”

With the wraparound case packer it had on display at PACK EXPO International, SOMIC showed how it has mastered the art of flexibility. The 424 series produces up to 25 cases/min in a small footprint. SOMIC is able to configure its standard machine to meet customer needs, using standard functional groups to quickly achieve packaging needs. “This gives our customers and us the flexibility to change for future needs,” Fox says.

This is particularly important in the labor situation that so many companies face these days, Fox notes. “Nobody has any labor anymore,” he says, noting that automation investments are based on the need to get jobs done. “ROI doesn’t even come up in our discussions.”

The 424 W3 wraparound case packer is suited to companies that need automation but don’t have the space.

A new case packer (8) featuring horizontal loading was being demonstrated at the PACK EXPO International booth of Nuspark. Photo 8—NusparkPhoto 8—NusparkCartons exit a Nuspark cartoner at speeds to 60 cartons/min and are lined up 12 at a time on a staging plate, so that when the case is full it will hold 120 cartons. All 120 cartons are pushed into the case, which the machine erects from a flat blank. Once cartons are inside, flaps are closed and the case is transferred laterally so that top and bottom taping can be done. The finished case is then upended onto a discharge roller conveyor for easy transfer to palletizing.

Watch a video of the case packer that was demonstrated at PACK EXPO.

New at PACK EXPO from Hamrick Packaging Systems was the Model 600D-TS, a tandem servo drop packer (9) that can run two cases per cycle on reshipper cases. “Our 600D-S topped out at about 30 reshippers/min because it could only do a single case per cycle,” says President Jordan Hamrick. “This new tandem servo machine lets us run reshippers at close to 50 per minute.”

Photo 9—HamrickPhoto 9—HamrickLike plenty of other exhibitors at the show, Hamrick has faced supply chain challenges over the last year or two when it comes to controls components like servo motors and drives and HMI screens. So the 600D-TS at the booth has servos from Mitsubishi and an HMI from Weintek. The 600D-TS features all-servo motion and the ability to align the tandem lug-driven indexing system to run larger formats in single-case-per-cycle operation.

Hamrick says that the machine on the show floor is headed for Luxco in St. Louis, a contract manufacturer specializing in spirits.

In an effort to provide a complete solution for end-of-line packaging operations, adhesive tape provider Shurtape unveiled at PACK EXPO International its own line of automated case erectors and case sealers (10).

Photo 10—ShurtapePhoto 10—ShurtapeThe Shurtape case erector models ET20U and ET30U are designed to handle 20 and 30 cases/min respectively, and are available in both a tape or a glue version.

The machine includes intuitive Fluid Form Controls and a SCARA robot performing pick and place tasks. A recipe-generating HMI tells the operator the adjustments that need to be made simply by putting in case dimensions. According to the company, the case erectors deliver quick and trouble-free changeovers, consistently square cases, and about 40-50% fewer wear parts than competing machines with less maintenance for maximum operational efficiencies in end-of-line packaging operations.

Working hand-in-hand with the case erector, the ST20U automated case sealer is able to handle a large variety of case sizes and configurations with the flexibility to dynamically move from large case input to small case input. It also includes the company’s quick-change ShurSeal solution.

“Our claim to fame over the last few years has been our ShurSeal technology, which is going to retrofit right into these pieces of equipment,” says Rob DeVries, Shurtape’s senior vice president of sales.Photo 11—YeamanPhoto 11—Yeaman

Watch a video of the machine in action at the Shurtape PACK EXPO booth.

Also focused on case packing at PACK EXPO International was Yeaman Machine Technologies. The Yeaman Top Load Case Packer (11), a newly designed product offering released in August 2022, can run up to 50 cases/min and works with a variety of regular slotted containers and other standard packages, says Chris Bradley, Yeaman director of sales.

The machine features case or carton erecting, a robotic infeed application, and high-speed intermittent or continuous motion. It utilizes Yeaman’s carousel style conveyor configured to hold cases square through all operations of the machine.

“So we’re able to take products in continuous flow, erect the case, hold the case, pick and place the customer’s product and drop it in, either through robotics or mechanics,” Bradley says. The system can also be fitted with a glue or tape sealer, and is capable of primary, secondary, and e-commerce packaging, including sift-proof seals.

The top-load setup is ideal for products that “might be a little bit more gentle, open top, and to be able to stack twos, fours, sixes, and eights and keep up with speed,” Bradley says. The model at the show demonstrated a baking application as an example.

Elsewhere at the Yeaman booth, the RIV Manufacturing-owned OEM showcased a semi-automatic pouch filler (12). It can be operated by a single laborer and maintain a filling rate of about 26 pouches/min, according to Bradley.

Photo 12—YeamanPhoto 12—YeamanThe filler can be integrated with any kind of feed system, including conveyor infeed, load cells, auger, and scale systems. Because the machine has dual filling heads, customer brands can fill a variety of different pouches on the same system.

“The side-by-side semi-automatic pouch loader system is a great solution for customers that might be at the second or third tier of their product growth,” Bradley says. “They have a variety of pouches that they need to get out the door every day.”

High-speed tray erecting

A recurring theme at PACK EXPO International was the substitution of paper for plastic, and Mpac was among the exhibitors featuring something along these lines. In this case it was lightweight corrugated cookie trays formed from flat blanks being proposed as an alternative to polystyrene or polypropylene trays.

Well established as a maker of tray and carton erecting machines, Mpac showed a carton erector (13) notable for at least two reasons. First, though its footprint is just 1.2 x 1 m (3.94 x 3.28 ft), it’s capable of erecting corrugated trays 50- to 55-mm (1.97- to 2.16-in.) deep from flat blanks at 200/min. And second, the F-flute corrugated trays have a grease-resistant property that makes them suitable for such things as cookies, for example, without making them unsuitable for recycling in the regular paper recycle stream.Photo 13—MpacPhoto 13—Mpac

Partnering with Mpac on the packaging material side of this development was PilloPak, a producer of corrugated board specializing in lightweight corrugated. Also a distinguishing characteristic of PilloPak is that about 85% of its applications are in the direct food-contact category.

The grease-resistant properties of the trays is not a function of a coating. PilloPak purchases grease-resistant paper from several outside suppliers to make the paper used on the Mpac machine. While the inner and outter liner materials are virgin fiber, some of the corrugated fluting can be recycled content. So in the end up to 50% of the structure is in fact recycled content, says PilloPak managing director Jan Tuininga. He also confirms that 100% of the tray is compatible with the conventional paper recycling stream.

When asked if the corrugator on which the board is made is customized or special in any way, Tuininga says not really, though he does add this. “The equipment becomes, in effect, highly specialized by way of our internal expertise. Is it rocket science? No. But when it comes to converting lightweight papers like these, that’s a real specialty. Most corrugators are dealing with paper no lighter than 70 grams per square meter. We operate routinely in the range of 30 grams per square meter.”

Tuininga says that his firm has been providing lightweight corrugated cookie trays for more than a decade. But he believes that the development of Mpac’s machine, with its compact footprint and 200 cartons/min speed, opens the market for a lot of high-volume producers who previously might have wanted an alternative to plastic but needed higher output than what was previously available.

Photo 14—MarkemPhoto 14—MarkemAs for cost, Tuininga acknowledges that the lightweight corrugated tray will likely come with an upcharge. But as brand owners look for ways to comply with social and governmental forces increasingly unhappy about the amount of one-way plastic in use, he believes a solid business argument can be made in favor of the corrugated trays.

Watch a video of the Mpac machine operating at PACK EXPO.

Marking and coding

A drawback to traditional CO2 laser printers has been that generally it isn’t practical to print on metal, or on applications with highly reflective surfaces. That renders most foils, foil backing in blister packs, and aluminum cans out of traditional laser printing’s range. But that’s where fiber laser printers shine. Markem-Imaje debuted at PACK EXPO International a new compact and high-performance 20-W fiber laser that delivers high-quality permanent coding on high-density and reflective substrates. The SmartLase F250 (14) is the first new product launched after Markem-Imaje’s acquisition of laser coding and marking solutions specialist Solaris Laser.

“The SmartLase F250 is a unique fiber laser serving the beverage, pharmaceutical, and confectionery industry,” Mark Boska, director of sales, North America, at Markem-Imaje told PW. “It prints on aluminum products, metal foil products, blister packs, and other films.”