Bagging output soars at Crunch Pak
“Our new layout was designed by us” says Freytag. “There were no blueprints for this.” One large area kept chilled was designated for processing and bagging. “It’s not a sterile area but has a very high level of cleanliness” he says. Operators entering the area must be properly garbed and step through a sanitizing bath.
Whole apples that have been scrubbed are conveyed into the room; when they are conveyed back out they have been sliced and bagged.
The upgrades have raised the company’s output. “We’ve had processing upgrades but the big difference has been the EaglePack machines” says Freytag. The move to automatic bagging reduced the company’s labor costs.
The steps leading to the baggers are also crucial and start with a very high grade of inbound raw fruit. “Otherwise it doesn’t matter what we do to it it’s still not going to last as long or taste as good as we want” notes Freytag.
Uniformity critical
Inside the room and ahead of bagging the apples are scrubbed and sliced. The slices are treated with an all-natural vitamin-mineral solution that prevents browning. “How we connect the various operations and the specific conditions that’s the science” says Freytag. “We guard that very carefully.”
Immediately upstream of bagging human sorters check for defective slices. Uniformity is crucial for its operations according to operations manager Todd Danko.
The scale programming automatically selects buckets most closely matching the target weight; those buckets then direct their contents down the filling tube.
The longitudinal seal is made in intermittent motion as the seal bar presses against the forming tube (for more film details see sidebar p.71).
The seal bar seals the bag bottom indexes and then seals the bag top. It seals the bag top of one bag and seals the bottom of the next as it cuts between the two seals.
Bags are discharged onto an inclined conveyor before they transfer onto a conveyor that takes the bags from the isolated area and into the warehouse for secondary packaging.
The pack’s 21-day shelf life contact coded by a thermal-transfer unit on the film unwind allows the apple slices to be sold to stores across the United States.
Danko says size changeovers take 12 minutes and require adjustment of the registration photoeyes film contact coder forming tube and settings on the machinery panels. Film roll changes needed for a change from tart to sweet varieties take five minutes.
The company was selected to provide its apple slices for the Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City (see p. 13).
With business continuing to grow Crunch Pak installed in mid-September a third EaglePack Phaser bagger.
See sidebar to this article: Bag film: A 'touchy' subject
See sidebar to this article: Bagged apple slices reach for the goldn







































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