Odom's takes 'Tennessee Pride' in cartoning

New carton-forming and -closing equipment improve efficiency at Tennessee Quality Foods’ breakfast sandwich packing facility in Dickson, TN.

A new robotic carton loader places wrapped breakfast sandwiches into cartons on this line at Odom's Tennessee Quality Foods' pla
A new robotic carton loader places wrapped breakfast sandwiches into cartons on this line at Odom's Tennessee Quality Foods' pla

Since opening its breakfast-sandwich packaging facility in Dickson, TN, back in 1989, Tennessee Quality Foods, Inc., has frequently upgraded its packaging equipment to remain efficient.

Last summer is a good example. That’s when TQF, a division of Madison, TN-based Odom’s Tennessee Pride Sausage, Inc., replaced older cartoning equipment with an HS2/60 carton erector, LJ-SRT robotic carton loader, and Tri-Liner carton closer, all from Bradman Lake.

“When we considered cartoning equipment, Bradman Lake offered what we were looking for,” recalls Ed Scarbrough, plant manager at the Dickson plant. “The machinery was competitively priced, it doesn’t take up a lot of floorspace, it’s high-quality equipment, and it’s easy to maintain.”

The decision to purchase the cartoning machines from Bradman Lake was also based on TQF’s previous experience with that supplier’s carton-erecting and -closing machines.

A key benefit of the new units, Scarbrough says, concerns changeovers. “With these machines, we can change them over in 10 to 20 minutes, whereas it took 30 to 40 with the older equipment. That time difference is very important because if we have a line down for a changeover, it means that line’s not running production.”

Upstream functions

The 65ꯠ-sq’ facility operates five days per week on two daily eight-hour shifts. “We have four packaging lines, all of which can produce any of the 25 different line items we run,” says Scarbrough. All of the eggs, sausage patties, and cheese products are prepared at other Odom’s Tennessee Pride plants, then individually quick-frozen and shipped to the Dickson facility where they’re stored in a warehouse freezer. A local baker supplies fresh biscuits. Product is brought to a 50º cool room for packaging at speeds between 180 and 200 packs/min.

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