Rayovac charges up battery lines
“Servos allow us to hit our target where batteries are placed” says Tippery. “If they aren’t set where they are supposed to be then we can’t close the clamshell lid.”
Plastic bulk trays from Rayovac’s battery manufacturing facility in Fennimore WI are loaded with 500 batteries vertically oriented in a 20x25 pattern. The trays are loaded manually into the infeed and from there the system automatically takes over. It indexes the trays unloads them into a hopper and stacks the empty trays. Sets of servo-driven pistons push the batteries out from beneath the hopper and into plastic carriers arranged in two rows.
Designed for fast tool-less changeovers (see changeover sidebar p. 23) the carriers are mounted to an indexing conveyor that positions atop a “bridge” over the clamshells in the main machine section. Once indexed in line with the clamshells vacuum pick-and-place units (an improvement over magnet-based units Rayovac uses on other lines) load eight sets of batteries into the open clamshells. This is done in two cycles one layer at a time yielding the front and back rows in the packs.
Denested eight-up
Meanwhile clamshells are denested from supply magazines eight-at-a-time at the head of the straight-line section. This is done via a rotary vacuum unit that places them into indexing holders. The RPET clamshells are supplied by Algus and by Plastic Ingenuity (Cross Plains WI). The wide-open clams are positioned with their flanges atop an aluminum frame. Rayovac customized the clamshell holders with easy changeover via peg and holes to accept any of the three sizes packed (see sidebar).
The printed die-cut cardstock from Cardpak (Solon OH) is applied over the batteries by another rotary vacuum pick-and-place unit.
The packs index to the closing station. Pins from below push the lids up from a layflat position and a roller assembly mounted over the clams comes from the cross direction to roll the lids shut. The hinge snaps shut and is secured via friction-fit corners.
The packs are conveyed on for a short distance before they discharge onto a 90° belt conveyor that carries them to labeling. Packs move past twin labelers from Auto-Labe (Ft. Pierce FL) that each apply a pressure-sensitive label to every other pack. The 2-mil clear polypropylene printed in three colors with the words “Reclosable Storage Pak” by Wisconsin Label (Algoma WI) wraps most of the way around the pack to provide tamper-evidence.
The packs are then hand-loaded into corrugated display cases pre-assembled with ridged plastic inserts that not only hold the packs upright for shipment but also function as display units.
Although similar in effect the AAA line is laid out in a straight-line versus the AA line’s “L” configuration. Like the AA line it was designed by Rayovac and built by Southwest Machine.
With distribution expanding and demand growing Rayovac planned to bolster production rates through the addition of second battery feeder systems for each line early this year.
Rayovac engineering manager Chuck Harmon and program manager Ken Kamp report that the new lines are in “excess” of 10% more efficient than their other packaging lines. That’s a positive for any new packaging line.
















































































































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