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Tasty Baking takes a bite of automation

Automated packaging lines have transformed the sixth floor at thelegendary Philadelphia bakery. Flowrappers, cartoners and case packers take center stage in the new lines.

As cartons are lifted up into the corrugated case, a loading tube keeps carton edges from catching on the edges of the case, t
As cartons are lifted up into the corrugated case, a loading tube keeps carton edges from catching on the edges of the case, t

Well-known in its headquarters city of Philadelphia and throughout most of the northeastern U.S., Tasty Baking is now investing some $25 million over three years in a bid to nationally distribute its snack cakes. To accomplish that out of a single plant, productivity and efficiency had to be improved. That meant investing in automation for much of the packaging equipment at Tasty's 82-year-old six-story factory in the City of Brotherly Love.

First in line for modernization was the sixth floor, where four ovens are dedicated to producing Krimpets and Junior cakes. In the past, these snacks were hand-fed into flowrappers. Cartoning was automated, but case packing was another manual operation.

In December, that changed dramatically. The firm gutted the entire floor and reassembled it with automatic equipment, including three bottom-loading case packers from Salwasser (Reedley, CA).

"We looked at all the case packing equipment out there," says director of production Tom Kenney. "We needed case packers that could flat-out run fast, without any limitations. That meant considering not only throughput, but good product handling, machine durability and quick changeover. We had the highest level of confidence in the Salwasser technology."

Salwasser's bottom-loading case-packing systems accumulate and vertically load cartons into corrugated cases. Because the process is gentle it allows cartons of the fragile cakes baked by Tasty to be case packed efficiently yet with minimal product handling and damage.

Each Salwasser system at Tasty Baking also features a unique loading tube that actually shrouds the cartons of product and is lifted slightly into the empty case just before product is lifted into the case. This technology eliminates the problems associated with the edges of cartons catching on the edges of cases. "Salwasser's carton shrouding system offers positive control," explains plant superintendent Joe Carboy. "Reducing product jams, this system improves efficiencies."

Automating the case-packing operation also brought tremendous benefits in the way people are deployed.

"We previously had six people case packing Krimpets and Juniors on the four packaging lines," says Kenney. There were five packers and one monitor. "We managed to redeploy four of these people to other parts of the plant. Now case packing is handled by only two operators. As we progress on our learning curve with this new technology, we'd like to handle this operation with one person."

Representative line

Upstream from the case packers, other key improvements were made on all four packaging lines that occupy the floor. Line 64, dedicated to Junior cakes in a variety of flavors, provides a good illustration of what each modernized line looks like.

The Junior cakes leave the oven eight-across on a metal belt conveyor that takes them to a transfer conveyor leading to the packaging equipment. A row aligner, supplied by Delta Systems (Rogers, AR), makes sure all eight cakes are lined up evenly. The aligner is simply a pneumatically driven plastic blade that comes up in the gap between two conveyor sections to stop the cakes for a split second. If one cake is lagging, it has a chance to catch up before the blade sinks.

Once aligned, the row of cakes leaves the transfer conveyor and proceeds ahead to the first of two Delta Systems transpositor belts. These retractable belts are designed to stroke back quickly, like the table cloth being pulled from beneath the dishes, thus creating a gap through which all eight cakes drop onto a takeaway conveyor running at a right angle. The transpositor then strokes back to its home position so the next row of eight cakes is conveyed right over it to the second transpositor belt. It drops its eight cakes onto a second takeaway conveyor running parallel to the first.

The use of two transpositor belts makes it possible to feed two Delta Systems flowrappers from one oven discharge conveyor. Just ahead of each flowrapper is a smart-belt infeed system, also from Delta Systems, that consists of five conveyor segments each driven by its own servo motor. The system serves two important purposes. First, the differential speeds of its first two conveyor segments turns each cake 90° so that cakes are aligned end-to-end in a single file. Its remaining conveyor belt segments create consistent spacing between cakes. Photoeyes detect the location of each cake, signalling the system's industrial PC to speed up or slow down individual belt conveyor sections as needed. In this way, each cake is properly aligned for placement into a flight of the flowrapper.

Longer shelf life

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