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Filling in a Jiffy

Chelsea Milling's new dual-lane auger filling system produces 20 boxes/min more than the filler it replaced while cutting in half the amount of giveaway of Jiffy baking mix.

Set-up cartons convey in two lanes (above and inset) from left to right past a control panel toward the auger filling system (a
Set-up cartons convey in two lanes (above and inset) from left to right past a control panel toward the auger filling system (a

Chelsea Milling doesn't advertise its home baking mixes to consumers. Instead, it relies on "our little blue boxes, as we like to call them," says Jack Kennedy, the Chelsea, MI, company's director of manufacturing operations. "The boxes are very much a part of the franchise of the Jiffy mix business."

And what a franchise it is. The company began producing a 40-oz all-purpose baking mix in 1930. Today it makes 19 different mixes on 17 packaging lines at the Chelsea plant, in five rooms, designated A, B, C, D and E. Room E houses four lines dedicated to Jiffy® corn muffin mix, which Kennedy says, "represents roughly 70 percent of our business."

One of the lines in Room E, however, was somewhat problematic. Specifically, an older two-scale weigher/filler had difficulty with the shortening that makes the mix somewhat clumpy.

"The machine was designed for more of a dry, free-flowing product," explains Chuck Elkins, packaging maintenance department leader. "The shortening sometimes caused the mix to 'ball-up.' So we were making the machine run something it really wasn't supposed to run."

Despite that, Elkins says, "We made the machine run for a lot of years, and it worked well for us, but we had to update it." The Michigan miller did just that in March, replacing the older machine on Line 17 with a Millennium 400 dual-lane, bulk-and-dribble auger filler from All-Fill (Exton, PA).

Chelsea is no stranger to packaging machinery and material upgrades. In the past two years, the company has upgraded bundling and tray packing equipment and added ink-jet printers for its corrugated shippers (see Packaging World, August '98, p. 58, or packworld.com/go/chelsea).

For this specific application, Chelsea's addition of the All-Fill machine wasn't done just for updating's sake. "The older machine we had been using needed regular attention," Kennedy notes. "And our product giveaway rate was about five grams per box. That's a lot on a 240-gram package. And the speed wasn't quite where we wanted it to be."

In looking for a replacement for the older filler, Kennedy says Chelsea "considered several options, including rotary fillers, but all-Fill was the only one with a performance guarantee of their speeds and accuracies in the straight-line filling system that we needed."

Chelsea's system was displayed by All-Fill at the supplier's booth at Pack Expo in Chicago last November. The machine was installed later at Chelsea's plant.

As this issue goes to press, Chelsea was in the early stages of commercial production on the machine, running it at a little more than 120 cartons/min. That's about 20/min more than the previous machine. Chelsea expects the filler to reach faster speeds in the near future. Besides speed advantages, the machine has already shown that it will reduce product waste. "Our giveaway is about half of what it was," confirms Kennedy.

Bulk-and-dribble

The key to the filler's accuracy, Kennedy believes, is its bulk-and-dribble feed system. "The fill occurs in two steps," he says. "At the bulk station, most of the package's 240-gram declared weight is filled. Then the carton moves onto an All-Fill checkweigher that feeds the weight information to the system's computer that tells the dribble feeder how much to add at the second fill station.

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