PMMI ProSource – Start Your Search
Check out our packaging and processing solutions finder, PMMI ProSource.

Keeping dirt clean

Bags of premium nursery soils don't sell well when they're dirty or faded. Bandini Fertilizer moves to automatic wrapping of pallet loads with a cover to keep bags-and company image-clean.

At Bandini, once a load is positioned on the turntable of the stretch wrapper (top), the top sheet is pulled out in the film fra
At Bandini, once a load is positioned on the turntable of the stretch wrapper (top), the top sheet is pulled out in the film fra

Generally, bags of soil mixtures sold at lawn and garden centers don't need to be in pristine condition when they arrive at the retailer. Because of the atmosphere in the plant where they're packaged, it's almost impossible to avoid some dust and dirt. What isn't acceptable today is a heavy layer of dirt that makes it hard to read the product identification and the brand name.

Since pallet loads of bagged soils are usually stored outside, especially on the West Coast, the only way to keep these bags clean is to wrap the loads in protective film. Not just a spiral wrap around the sides of the load, but also a top cap that protects the top layer of bags from the elements.

It was just this situation that led Bandini Fertilizer, Vernon, CA, to find a load wrapping system that would protect its loads from the weather, and the contamination that could accumulate on them in the plant's own outside storage.

Bandini's answer was an automatic stretch wrapping system from Orion Packaging (Memphis, TN) that included the addition of a top sheet to protect all sides of the pallet load from the elements. Because of the plant's space restrictions and the requirements of the company's loads, it was far from an "off the shelf" installation. Here's why:

* The production line at Bandini left little room to add an automatic stretch wrapper at the end of the automatic palletizer. Eventually, the plant had to open up a plant wall and add a roller conveyor to carry finished loads out to the storage yard.

* Because of Bandini's oversize pallet, wrapping systems designed to handle the 48 x 40" grocery pallet wouldn't work. Thus, Orion had to enlarge its wrapper, conveyors, the turntable and the top sheet system to accommodate the larger load size.

* Thanks to the company's 56" long pallet size, the film roll for the top sheet system had to be mounted across the conveyor. That way the film rolls wouldn't be so wide they couldn't be easily handled.

* Since the wrapper was to be mounted adjacent to not one but two open doorways, the top sheet system had to control the sheet even when breezes were blowing into the plant.

* To work within Bandini's capital expenditure plan, Orion had to design the oversize stretch wrapper to accept a top sheet system that wasn't going to be installed until almost a year later.

The key to the success of this project was the determination of Orion's Western sales agent, Bob Zwick. "When I first talked with the Bandini engineers, they said: 'This is what we'd like to do, but we can't fit it in.' When someone says 'can't,' I really perk up," he says. That challenge put Zwick to work on his own computer-aided design system, long before he asked the Orion engineers to work on the installation. Along with Zwick, the sale was made through Orion distributor, Gulf-Pacific Packaging (Vernon, CA).

Semi-automatic before

Before the new installation was completed in late spring, Bandini sent out most loads without stretch wrap. Packaging World asked Bandini plant superintendent Art Pellegrini what the plant used before. "Nothing," was his reply and a slight overstatement.

"If a load needed to be stretch wrapped, our people would do it by hand," he reports. "We had portable units that required a forklift driver to remove the load from our line, wrap it in film and then place it back on line or onto a truck for delivery. This process required at least one and sometimes two workers to accomplish. So it was time-consuming and inefficient, and we still didn't have a top cover on the load."

Increasingly, more of Bandini customers were asking for fully-wrapped loads, says Don Knipp, marketing manager, as a way to keep them clean. Bandini customers wanted the assurance that when wrapped loads were unwrapped, the top tiers of bags would not be so soiled that the customer or the consumer couldn't even read the name of the product.

To avoid this problem and to provide load integrity, the company looked at pallet wrapping with a top cover.

New e-book on Flexible Packaging
In this e-book, you’ll learn key considerations for vertical and horizontal f/f/s and how to choose between premade bags and an f/f/s system. Plus, discover the pitfalls to avoid on bagging machinery projects.
download
New e-book on Flexible Packaging
Connected Workforce Report
Discover how connected workforce technologies and automation can bridge the skills gap in our latest report. Explore actionable insights and innovative solutions.
Read More
Connected Workforce Report