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Robots come within packagers' reach

Increased speeds and flexibility, less complex operation, and lower price tags are putting robotics within reach of a range of packaging operations.

Pw 5106 Robot Planners

Blue Bell Creamery of Brenham, TX, is busy installing its thirteenth robot, packaging ice cream in one of its three plants across the Southern U.S. But Blue Bell was not always so automation-savvy, as company vice president of operations and associate director Gene Supak relates: “With the earlier models, speed was an issue, and cost was an issue. Over the years, the robots have gotten faster, and the prices have come down. We have looked at automation for years, and the pricing was just out of reach. In the last 10 years, the pricing has gotten to a point where it’s economically feasible.”

Supak’s experiences mirror many packagers’ who, once intimidated by the high price tags and complex electronics of automation, are now successfully employing robotics that offer enhanced flexibility with great success. Wolfgang Candy is a good example.

Candy creations are picked and packed with care

Increased volume was the catalyst for a new packaging line with robotic pick-and-place at Wolfgang Candy Company, one of the oldest family-owned and managed confectionery manufacturers in the U.S. From the time it was incorporated in 1921 until six years ago, the York, PA-based company primarily operated in the fundraising sphere. With the takeover of the business in 2003 by the family’s fourth generation, Wolfgang expanded into new areas, including contract and private-label packaging, and production and packaging of its own brand of chocolate and non-chocolate confections for retail sale.

Wolfgang’s 100,000-sq-ft operation, consisting of three buildings in a one-block radius, now produces close to 120 different SKUs on 14 lines. Given the flexibility required to meet its range of customer needs, packaging for Wolfgang’s products has remained almost exclusively manual. “Without any automated systems, it’s as flexible as a human being,” relates Robert L. Wolfgang III, managing partner responsible for Food Safety and Quality.

Until recently, Wolfgang hesitated to add automation to its packaging lines because of the poor return on investment, once space requirements and production volumes were considered. “In the past, when we ran through the real numbers, the return on investment wasn’t there,” says Wolfgang. “As we pursued different markets, we realized increased volumes and larger production runs. Then all of a sudden automation made sense.”

In June, Wolfgang installed a new tray-packing line, specified and integrated by JLS Automation (www.jlsautomation.com). New equipment includes a tray denester/placer from FEMC (www.femc.com), a Carrera horizontal wrapper from Ilapak (www.ilapak.com), and the JLS Talon Series dual-robot packaging system. The Talon features two IRB 340 FlexPicker™ robots from ABB Robotics (www.abb.com/robotics). The top-mounted robots, nicknamed “Lucy” and “Ethel” by Wolfgang operators, inspect product and then pick and place it into thermoform trays accurately and reliably.

Explains Wolfgang managing partner and CMO Mike Schmid, one of Wolfgang’s chief requirements for the new line, and for the robot in particular, was the ability to gently handle a range of product types—from well-defined, molded candy pieces to candy bars, both with inclusions and plain chocolate bars, to molded plaques, such as Easter bunnies and Santa figures.

Says Wolfgang, “What JLS has given us is flexibility, because it is a pick-and-place system and not a dedicated, hard-engineered system. We can pick and place nearly anything.”

Another expectation for the robot, says Wolfgang, was speed. The company was looking for a system that could meet or exceed 200 pieces/min. Lastly, it needed a solution that could fit in a defined footprint.

The new line is currently running two types of cookie products containing a molded piece of chocolate in the center. After the cookies are produced, they are delivered by conveyor to the JLS system. Product is conveyed at a constant speed through an existing metal detector and then onto the robotic-picking belt.

On the picking conveyor, product location is identified with a camera, and each cookie is analyzed to check that most of the top surface is covered with chocolate. Product that passes inspection continues on the picking line. Operating on-demand, the tray denester provides a tray to each wrapper flight. Tray presence is verified with a sensor. The robots then pick each cookie, with vacuum technology developed by JLS, and place them individually into a tray on the flow-wrapper infeed conveyor. The flow wrapper operates intermittently and ensures that all trays are completely filled via communication with the robot software before trays leave the robotic work cell.

Since it was installed, the line has met Wolfgang’s productivity expectations, from both a speed and a flexibility standpoint. Automation certainly provides some other benefits over manual operations as well, says Wolfgang. “The robot doesn’t take any breaks, and it doesn’t call in sick!” he says. “So far, it has been very reliable. It doesn’t stop.”

As for ROI, “the cost is worth it,” says Wolfgang CEO Benjamin A. McGlaughlin. “We will realize a return in a relatively short time period. So the results are well worth the investment.”

Three robots provide a shot in the arm for Novartis

In Rosia, a small town near Siena, in Italy’s Tuscany region, vaccines for threatening illnesses—among them influenza, polio, diphtheria, tetanus, rabies, meningitis, and others—are produced and packaged by Novartis Vaccines & Diagnostics, a division of Swiss-based Novartis AG. Novartis is the fifth-largest vaccine manufacturer in the world and is the second-largest supplier of flu vaccines in the U.S.

INTRODUCING! The Latest Trends for Food Products at PACK EXPO Southeast
The exciting new PACK EXPO Southeast 2025 unites all vertical markets in one dynamic hub, generating more innovative answers to food packaging and processing challenges. Don’t miss this extraordinary opportunity for your business!
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INTRODUCING! The Latest Trends for Food Products at PACK EXPO Southeast