Film's flexibility fits ice packs

Puncture-resistant film protects Forever Ice's 'reusable' ice to withstand repeated freezing and thawing. A custom tf/f/s machine improves efficiency.

Specialty films help the unusual Flexible Ice reusable ice product withstand multiple freeze/thaw cycles and the rigors of trans
Specialty films help the unusual Flexible Ice reusable ice product withstand multiple freeze/thaw cycles and the rigors of trans

Union Grove, WI-based Forever Ice Inc. markets its Flexible Ice(TM) as a reusable product that outdoor enthusiasts and picnickers can take with them to keep food cold and prevent sandwiches from becoming soggy. Users can freeze sheets or cubes of Forever Ice, then wrap them in and around food inside lunch boxes and coolers. Each sheet contains individual "pillows" that accommodate on average 15 g of water, about the same as one cube in an ice cube tray. Commercial customers can use Flexible Ice in trucks to keep cold shipments of food or medical products. The sheets or cubes can be washed and reused many times, according to Forever Ice.

From a packager's standpoint, it's the property of the films holding the filtered water, combined with customized thermoform/fill/seal equipment, that make Flexible Ice so interesting. Both forming and lidding films that contain the water are supplied by Curwood (Oshkosh, WI). The tf/f/s machine is from Hooper Engineering (Sarasota, FL).

Forever Ice introduced the product in '96, using a contract packager to fill the product on an older tf/f/s machine. In early '98, Forever Ice replaced the older unit with a Model N2500S servo motor-driven tf/f/s machine from Hooper and had it installed at the CP for production of Flexible Ice. The new tf/f/s operates at faster speeds, and it provides improved forming and sealing capabilities, according to Forever Ice. The new unit now thermoforms, fills and seals nine different products that range from an eight-cube sheet for school lunchboxes to sheets for commercial businesses that are about 20"Wx20'L.

There is space between the pockets on the sheet that allows consumers to cut the sheet into smaller sections. Consumers can cut individual cubes from the sheets if they wish, though Forever Ice sells a Six Pack Cooler(TM) that contains 33 individual cubes (1-lb worth) in a clear plastic bag with a header card. The company sells Flexible Ice by the lb. Its two primary sheet offerings are a 21/2-lb, 19"x16" size that includes 88 cubes, and a 11/4-lb, 19"x8" sheet that has 44 cubes.

Functional film

The forming web for Flexible Ice is Curwood's Curlon ICE® (Internal Coolant Exchange). It's a 6-mil, seven-layer material that includes nylon and linear low-density polyethylene. The film is supple and resilient, according to Curwood. The film's characteristics help Flexible Ice withstand multiple freeze/thaw cycles. The film's toughness helps it through the rigors of transportation. The supplier says the film is made by a proprietary coextrusion process that provides puncture-resistance, clarity, sheen and machinability. The 3-mil lidding structure, also from Curwood, is an adhesive lamination of oriented polyester and LLDPE. For the most part, Forever Ice uses unprinted film, though it is considering having the product name and its penguin logo printed on the film. Some commercial accounts request having their logo or other art printed on the film. In this case, says Forever Ice, Curwood supplies printed, or even metallized film.

Certainly, this is no ordinary film structure. While the company didn't provide cost figures, Forever Ice founder and owner I.C. Duros raves about the film. "It provides durability and unbelievable freeze/thaw characteristics," he says. "It maintains full flexibility when it's frozen, and that's important. It also allows for the natural expansion of water as the water freezes. The film gives the product a lifespan of many years. In fact, I'm still using sheets of the ice from when I developed the product more than four years ago. The film doesn't degrade."

Asked how he decided on using the Curwood films, Duros says, "We tried many plastic films and Curwood was one of them. They sent us samples and their film performed better than anyone else's. It had the best consistency and the best price. And their delivery time was best."

In-house efficiency

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