Inkjet coders from PRISM ease PPG line maintenance
PPG Industries installed the first of the new printers on a line coding cases for quart cans of paint. Guide rails position cases approximately 1?16-inch from the print heads. The print heads are mounted to create codes on the top end flap of each case as it moves down the conveyor to the palletizer. Line speeds vary and the coding equipment speed varies to accommodate changes in conveyor line speed.
Typical codes are two lines with a distance of 11?2 to 2 inches from the top of the top code to the bottom of the bottom code. A typical code has a lot or batch code on the top and human-readable information on the bottom. The four overlapping print heads allow variation in the codes. “Some codes are an inch high and we use two print heads to do that” Bishop says.
The system is networked through a computer that controls all four PRISM printers in the plant. PPG Industries personnel initiate the coding setup by scanning the bar code on a can of paint from the run. The procedure eliminates errors that might be introduced by keying in code information into the printer’s controller. The computer then sends the information to the controller of the appropriate printer.
Controller provides back-up
Each printer has its own controller with a touch screen. Standard operating procedures do not utilize the touch screen at the controller. However Bishop notes “The touch screen allows programming at the controller giving us a back up if we need it.”
Ink feeds to the print heads from a bag-in-box ink supply. Each box holds 370 milliliters of ink. This configuration works best for the PPG Industries operation but other ink supply configurations are available.
The procedure at the East Point plant is to change the print heads when changing the bulk ink supply. The ink supply is connected to the print head with a plastic tube affixed to the print head.
“When you run out of ink you change out the whole thing—the box of ink the tube and the print head” Bishop explains. “The beauty of this is that you can change the print head as fast as you can change the print head in a DeskJet printer. It is just ‘pop out’ and ‘pop in.’
“It got to the point I could change a print head between two boxes coming down the conveyor” Bishop says.
Following the success with the new quart line PPG Industries retrofitted JETPACK 5000 printers on the plant’s existing lines that run quarts and gallons. Printers on lines that run gallons see the most use running three shifts a day.
“There are cost advantages both from the cost of the ink and the maintenance” Bishop continues. “These printers are neat and clean compared to what we were doing. There are a lot of little advantages. Clean up only requires water. And the earlier printers had a tendency to leak on the floor creating a mess.”
All these factors combine to produce a lower total cost of ownership (TCO) than other coding and marking solutions.
See sidebar to this article: PRISM delivers HP inkjet technology with proven advantages
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