Strapping gets an upgrade at Ford

At Ford's massive parts center just outside Detroit, new strapping equipment helps ensure that dealerships around the world receive quality damage-free parts.

With one strap already in place (top), the operator holds down the flaps as a second strap is applied. Because the corrugated co
With one strap already in place (top), the operator holds down the flaps as a second strap is applied. Because the corrugated co

Occupying a mind-boggling 3.1-million-sq-ft in Romulus, MI, Ford Motor Co.'s Parts Redistribution Center is the very heart of the Ford Customer Service Div. Continuous improvement of processes and updating of equipment has been a cornerstone of the PRC since its completion in 1971, and the latest example is the recently completed Strapping Machine Project in the sheet metal packaging area. This is where door panels, fenders, tailgates and other metal parts are packaged for shipment to a network of distribution centers both domestic and foreign.

The three-year project involved a phased-in installation of 20 machines from Ovalstrapping (Fort Payne, AL) that has brought significant improvements in areas such as worker safety, energy consumption, package consistency, labor costs, maintenance, and reduced damage to parts shipped.

"Our biggest problem before these machines arrived was downtime," says materials handling engineer Juan Lucaire. "If one of our old strappers jammed, it was a long time before we could get it running again."

Safety was an issue, too. The previous machines used metal fingers to hold the polypropylene strapping in position between cycles. To clear a jam, the fingers had to be manually opened to remove the strapping in the track. This put the worker in close proximity to the heater bar.

The new machines have a single track system that leaves no strapping exposed. To clear a jam, the operator pushes two buttons and the strap is ejected or a loose end is drawn back into the machine for use in the next cycle. No fingers come in contact with the banding or the heater bar.

Four machine clusters

The new strapping machines are clustered in four groups of five each. Right down the middle of the machines-10 strappers on one side and 10 on the other-runs a continuously moving conveying system equipped with hooks on which parts to be packaged hang. Stacked beside each Ovalstrapping unit are the corrugated shipping containers used for packaging.

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