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Software brews line efficiency at Miller

Brewer sees quick payback on a multimillion-dollar investment in software that’s increasing output at six breweries nationwide. The software will be used for 57 lines, for cans, glass and plastic bottles.

The computer screen capture at far left shows detailed reasons for stoppages on each machine on a packaging line. Downtime patte
The computer screen capture at far left shows detailed reasons for stoppages on each machine on a packaging line. Downtime patte

When a brewer as prolific as Miller can increase its plant output by more than 4%, shorten its line start-up time by 20% and reduce its downtime, it’s living the high life.

Those figures exemplify some of the benefits Milwaukee-based Miller Brewing Company is enjoying since it began using Gebo Industries Canada’s (Laval, Quebec, Canada) Efficiency Improvement Tool (EIT) software. The software diagnostic tool monitors packaging lines at six Miller plants nationwide. The company uses that information to improve efficiencies of lines at all six of those U.S. plants, for lines that fill glass, can and plastic bottles.

While Miller won’t divulge specific financial savings from EIT, they’re likely to be substantial given the brewer’s volume. So substantial that Miller can justify a nearly six-figure dollar investment for total implementation costs for each of the 57 lines on which EIT will be installed in the next two years. Those investment figures come from Larry Trunek, Miller’s senior electrical corporate engineer.

“Miller has been trying to monitor line activities for more than 25 years,” Trunek reports. “And in the 18 years I’ve been with Miller, I know of at least seven different variants we’ve tried—unsuccessfully. We’ve tried to capture efficiencies and personnel performance on a line. We found that met with resistance.

“We used Gebo for some packaging line consulting and they showed us an application they developed in concert with another brewer,” he recalls. “We were impressed and said we’d like to experiment with it in our facility. That was about three years ago.”

The first installation of the software was on a glass bottling line in the Milwaukee plant in early ’97. Since then, EIT has been added to lines in Irwindale, CA, Fort Worth, TX, Albany, GA, Trenton, OH, and Eden, NC. Trunek says the software may also be used at a recently acquired facility in the Northwest. “The software is used with glass lines, aluminum can lines, kegs and for plastic bottles on a retrofitted glass line in Fort Worth.” As of April, EIT was in place on 37 of the 57 lines.

Volume demands efficiency

A “typical” bottling line at Miller includes a depalletizer, uncaser, rinser, filler, pasteurizer, labelers, case packers, slitter/sealers, palletizer and stretch wrapper. Between equipment and labor costs, a new line represents an investment of $15 million to $25 million, Trunek says. Lines run around the clock, at speeds of around 2ꯠ cans/min, 1괌 glass bottles/min, 850 plastic bottles/min or kegs at 620 half barrels/hr. Each barrel contains 31 gal of the suds. Trunek says Miller measures line efficiency by the amount of barrels/hr it produces. “Our packaging lines range from 130 to 280 barrels per hour,” he estimates.

He adds, “a one-percent increase [in line output] equates to big dollars for us.” Volume appears to be a key justification for the system. Trunek adds, “We developed our version of the software with Gebo to give us more functionality.”

Miller’s involvement in the developmental process helped the brewer earn a price advantage for its EIT investment. That investment includes a one-time licensing fee per packaging line, and “installation costs.” Those costs, Trunek says, “include modifying PLC codes on the equipment, installing the software, setting up our database and entering parameters for data collection.” Average total cost per line, he says, comes to about $90ꯠ. And while he admits it’s quite an investment, he says it’s one that’s paying off handsomely.

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