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Seneca sets its sights on plastic

Seneca Foods was among the first to convert from glass to hot-fillable plastic jars for applesauce. Now it fills both glass and plastic containers on essentially the same line.

After caps are applied, jars pass through an induction sealer (left) that secures a foil liner to the 63-mm finish. The clos
After caps are applied, jars pass through an induction sealer (left) that secures a foil liner to the 63-mm finish. The clos

Introducing a breakthrough plastic jar doesn't have to require a brand new packaging line. A few additions here and there to an existing glass line can make it flexible enough to accommodate plastic, as Seneca Foods of Marion, NY, learned last summer when it launched a heat-set jar made of polyethylene terephthalate for applesauce (see Packaging World, June '98, p. 2, or packworld.com/ go/seneca).

Injection stretch/blow-molded by Graham Packaging (York, PA), the pinch-grip jar--holding 48 or 46.5 oz depending on variety--is filled in Seneca's Prosser, WA, plant. Filling is done on the same packaging line originally created for the glass jar that has been replaced by PET. Glass hasn't been eliminated. Seneca still uses the line to fill a 25-oz glass jar.

four key pieces of equipment have been added to the Prosser line to accommodate the plastic container: capper, induction sealer, labeler and seal integrity tester. The labeler and seal integrity tester are now used for both glass and plastic. The new induction sealer and the new capper aren't in operation for glass. Glass containers are conveyed through them as if they weren't there.

Less obvious changes on the revamped line are sensors that are vital for better control of plastic containers.

"We need tighter control so that, for instance, if there's a delay between the filler and the cooler, bottles automatically stop entering the filler," says vice president of technical services Vince Lammers. "Otherwise you might wind up with hot sauce in the plastic bottle and no way to begin cooling it, which could cause the bottle to deform from the prolonged exposure to heat."

Seneca's sensors are photocells. "They tell us where the bottles are on the line by sending inputs to the PLC, which in turn controls bottle movement overall," says plant manager Ron Malecha. "The nature of the bottle requires the added control. If you allow bottles to jam up, they can get crushed a bit. Some of that was alleviated by Graham redistributing the material in the bottle. The bottle didn't get heavier, but through process changes, it did get stronger."

The pinch-grip PET container has been in production at Prosser since April. When glass bottles are being filled on the glass/plastic line, they're sent through a rinser and tempering unit that warms them. This prevents the glass from shattering when the hot apple sauce hits it. This treatment is inappropriate for plastic containers. So Seneca took a gripper/rinser used elsewhere in the plant for juice in heat-set PET and repositioned the machine so it could feed containers to both juice and sauce lines.

For now the shared arrangement works because the company produces apple sauce in glass jars 40% of the time. During that time, the gripper/rinser can be dedicated to PET bottles for juice. But eventually, a separate gripper/rinser will be needed so each line can have its own dedicated machine.

Rinsed PET bottles enter the same piston filler used for glass containers. "We have change parts for the filler to position the bottles correctly under the fill nozzles," says Malecha. "We fill plastic a few days in a row, then switch to glass. Right now we probably run six out of every ten days in plastic."

When plastic is in production, the in-line capper that would apply metal lug closures to glass bottles is adjusted so that the plastic containers convey right through to a rotary capper from Fowler/Zalkin (Athens, GA). The eight-head Model CAF-8/320 capper is standard in some respects. But it was modified to permit nitrogen gas flushing of the container headspace. This flushes oxygen out of the head space, and the less oxygen the applesauce is exposed to, the longer its shelf life.

While some flushing systems use a moving injector, Fowler developed a stationary manifold concept that creates a nitrogen-rich environment in the short space where cap and bottle are joined. Neither Seneca nor Fowler will quantify residual oxygen levels, but both emphasize that the nitrogen flushing system is highly efficient.

Low residual oxygen in the headspace is one factor contributing to the product's shelf life. "We can be confident of shelf life equivalent to glass with this container," says Malecha. Tracking information is ink-jet printed on each cap. But Seneca doesn't mark a use-by date on either plastic or glass containers of its applesauce, relying instead on effective control over inventory turns to get bottles to consumers on time.

Induction sealing

Videos from Enercon Industries Corp.
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