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Bacardi moves to modernization

A revamp of Line One is just part of a plant-wide move to upgrade, automate, and modernize Bacardi’s Jacksonville, FL, plant. See in-plant video

Bottles are removed from reshippers by a continuous-motion rotary-style uncaser (left).
Bottles are removed from reshippers by a continuous-motion rotary-style uncaser (left).

Currently capable of churning out about nine million cases of rum and rum-based products each year, the Bacardi Bottling Corp. of Jacksonville, FL, is now in the middle of a major modernization. And why not, says plant operations manager Bob Zahn. “Most of these lines are 20 years old,” he points out.

Line One is a perfect yardstick for measuring the improved efficiencies Bacardi hopes to gain through its upgrades. Dedicated to 750-mL and 1-L glass bottles, the line is designed to fill 400 bottles/min. Its predecessor maxed out at 300.

Operators have been redeployed, too, as sleek new machines now perform many of the repetitive and mechanical chores formerly done by Bacardi personnel. Zahn figures that Line One now requires about half as many people as in the past. Depalletizing is a perfect example. Before the new line was installed, workers depalletized reshippers by hand and placed them on the infeed conveyor of an uncasing machine. Now, a high-level depalletizer from Krones Kettner (Franklin, WI) handles most of the job automatically.

“An operator on a forklift removes two pallets side by side from the trailer at a time and places them directly on the powered roller conveyor that feeds the depalletizer,” says Zahn. “We can accumulate up to seven full pallets, each having seven layers of reshippers.”

After an operator removes stretch film and strapping, the pallets are advanced by powered roller conveyors as needed. Sensors along the way relay pallet position information to the Kettner system’s PLC, an Allen-Bradley SLC 5/03 from Rockwell Automation (Milwaukee, WI). The PLC in turn activates the roller conveyors to advance pallets forward.

Once a full pallet enters the Kettner machine, the top slip sheet is removed automatically by a vacuum pickup arm and stacked in a bin. The pallet is then elevated so that an overhead sweep device can push cases one row at a time onto a right-angle take-away conveyor.

Sighted at Pack Expo

Zahn says he first saw the Kettner equipment at Pack Expo and later went with a Kettner rep to watch the equipment in action at a customer plant. Apparently he liked what he saw. “It’s rated at 60 cases per minute, and it’s really well constructed,” he points out. Two more Kettner depalletizing systems are on their way, he adds.

Also being evaluated is a recently developed system from Pearson Packaging Systems (Spokane, WA) that will automatically remove film wrap and straps. “The equipment is in and running at Coke and Pepsi,” says Zahn. “We’re keeping an eye on how it goes for them.”

Once overhead, cases are conveyed about 150’ until they reach the filling room. The Magneroll™ low-pressure conveyor from Gebo (Bradenton, FL) operates on a magnetic clutch principle that causes the conveyor rollers to halt whenever cases are backed up. This prevents damage to the cases due to friction. Gebo also served as line integrator.

When cases reach the filling room, they descend nearly to floor level and move one at a time into an uncaser (see sidebar) that picks the empty bottles from each case and puts them onto a tabletop chain conveyor leading to the rinser/filler/capper block. The reshippers are then conveyed overhead toward the case packer. But first they pass through an inspection system from Heuft (Downers Grove, IL) that x-rays each case to ensure that no bottle has been left in. Any case with a bottle is rejected.

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