Gadzooks dresses up its shipper labeling
After scanning and before labeling the box is weighed by the Weigh-Tronix Model CVC 4824 in-motion scale; the weight is sent to the PC to be included in the data transmitted to FedEx though the weight is not required on the label.
The 6”x4” pressure-sensitive labels are manufactured by TBS as rollstock. The label is printed with all required FedEx data elements. The label is indexed to the tamp-blow mechanism that applies it to near the middle of the side of the passing box when the box trips a photoeye. The label is applied oriented horizontally 16” from the box’s leading edge and about 8” from the bottom. The typical box is 30” long though Gadzooks also periodically runs odd-sized boxes through the system.
If the scanner cannot read the bar code it generates an error label. Those boxes is directed toward a rework conveyor loop located after the second scanner.
Next the boxes are secured by the Japanese-made strapping machine from Samuel Strapping Systems that was installed as part of the upgrade. De Freitas says the boxes are strapped with bands of extruded polypropylene because Gadzook’s average box weighs 45 lb too heavy for tape alone. Besides strapping is cheaper than tape he adds. Tape secures the top flaps—along with a hand-applied cross-section of tape—for security reasons. A photoeye mounted on the strapper ensures another box isn’t conveyed for strapping until after the strapping cycle is completed.
“The strapper has been a great machine” says de Freitas.
Cases are then conveyed past a Datalogic Model DS2100 scanner that verifies that the FedEx shipping label is present. According to de Freitas two conditions will cause the system to automatically shut down after it scans the label: If there is no FedEx label present or if the label’s bar code is unreadable. The scan is triggered when the box is sensed by a photoeye. Cases are directed toward one of two outbound conveyors used in the prior set up or to the reject loop that separates rejected cases for workers.
Auspicious start
Before Gadzooks’ personnel manually scanned the boxes and attached printed labels. De Freitas says that five full-time positions have since been reduced to two or three depending on demand. “Labor savings is where we really get the bang for our buck” he says. “This is a huge improvement—we don’t have to have people there ‘babysitting’ each box.”
Simultaneously Gadzooks’ fulfillment rate was bumped up from 4-5 boxes/min to 7-10 boxes/min.
An even more telling figure is efficiency which Gadzooks tracks by cases per manhour. Before the change that figure was 24 to 28. The first day the new labeling line was in operation Gadzooks’ efficiency jumped nearly 50% to 46 cases per manhour. “It was a pleasant surprise how quickly the productivity changed” de Freitas says. Since then things have only gotten better: Gadzooks now consistently operates in the 50 to 60 cases/manhour range.
De Freitas admits that the system is not perfect; he places the error rate of mislabeled boxes at less than 1/10 of 1%. For comparison the rate in the more labor-intensive previous set up was near zero.
The bottom line for Gadzooks is a highly fashionable one-year payback.
Another bright spot has been that store managers have been oblivious to the change. “It was seamless to them” says de Freitas. While fashion trends come and go de Freitas expects years of dependable operation with the labeling system.


























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