Odom's takes 'Tennessee Pride' in cartoning
“All of the packs are gas flushed” says Scarbrough “which gives us a shelf life of 55 to 60 days for products sold through the refrigerated chain and six months for frozen sandwiches. On the Campbell machines we introduce a blend of nitrogen and carbon dioxide to eliminate oxygen.”
The Campbell machines heat seal the film and a knife cuts through the seal area separating the leading packed sandwich while creating the leading seal for the subsequent pack. TQF can set the machine to cut between each sandwich pack or to cut between every other seal for two-packs.
Before adding the four new Campbell Wrapper machines Scarbrough says TQF had used “wrappers from when we opened the plant in 1989 that just didn’t give us the versatility we needed with the different products. There were high maintenance costs involved and the speed and throughput were about 50 percent of where we are right now.”
Also he says changeovers on the previous equipment were a lot more involved. “There were more than 20 sealing heads on a carousel. The new wrapper has only one rotating head on it. It takes standard open-end and boxed-end wrenches and sockets to do the changeovers. And we can change over from one product to another in 10 to 20 minutes. Before it was 45 minutes to one-and-a-half hours” says Scarbrough.
Cartoning flexibility
On one of its four lines TQF employs a bagger that wraps 10 twin-packs in a printed bag. Each of the other three lines is outfitted with a Bradman Lake machine. One of the lines uses right-angle Bradman Lake carton-forming and -closing machinery. The two newer lines employ straight-line equipment.
The newest of the two lines with straight-line equipment employs an HS2/60 carton erector. It sends erected cartons on a conveyor to the Bradman Lake LJ-SRT robotic product collator and loader. Formed empty cartons accumulate in a set of servo-driven side-running belts. Cartons are supplied by Caraustar in 17- and 22-pt versions. All cartons are printed offset in six colors. Next cartons are transferred into a second set of servo-driven running belts that are computer-programmed to advance cartons accurately to predetermined positions for top loading. Filled cartons are automatically released on a discharge conveyor to a carton closer that uses hot melt glue to seal cartons shut.
“We were just looking for something that was dependable and would do what we wanted it to do” says Scarbrough of the cartoning equipment. “But we did eliminate some labor costs.” In fact he says that the machinery helped to free up three people per line.
Sealed cartons are conveyed to an automatic case packer on one line. The other three lines are packed manually. “Last year we put in automatic case packing and palletizing on this one line” says Scarbrough. “We have plans within the next two to three years to automate the other three lines.” One line is automatically palletized the other three are manually palletized prior to stretch wrapping on an older machine.
Either 12 or 24 cartons are packed into a case. These are shipped frozen from the Dickson plant by contract carriers to distribution centers primarily in the eastern half of the United States. At the store level some sandwiches are sold refrigerated some frozen.
“We’ve been very happy with the Bradman Lake equipment” says Scarbrough. “They’re good people to work with and they provide service and technical support.” As for the equipment’s return on investment he concludes “it’s been anywhere from 18 to 24 months on all the equipment and our newest line is dependable user friendly to operators requires little space and allows us to handle additional production.”



























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