Coors rolls out the barrel can

Pub barrel cans of Coors Killian’s Red are wrapped in heat-shrink OPP at a rate of 250 cans/min by a cut-and-glue labeling system located downstream from the can shaper.

Shrink system (above) uses carefully aimed heat guns to provide a can-hugging fit, even for shaped cans of Killian's Red (top).
Shrink system (above) uses carefully aimed heat guns to provide a can-hugging fit, even for shaped cans of Killian's Red (top).

If looks count in packaging, then Coors, Golden, CO, scores twice for Killian’s® Pub Barrel™ introduced earlier this year (see Packaging World, May ’00, page 53). The product possesses a pair of attention-getting touches: a printed shrink-film label that enwraps a 12-oz barrel-shaped aluminum can. The full-body shrink label hugs the can’s contours to reveal its barrel-like ridges. Killian’s is a rare example of full-body shrink labeling on a contour can.

Not only do these features work in tandem, but they also are done in tandem on the production line. The cans are shaped and labeled on a reconfigured production line at Valley Metal’s can manufacturing plant in Golden. Valley is a joint venture between Coors and Rexam Beverage Cans America (Chicago, IL), formerly American National Can Co., the latter of which provides the can-shaping equipment.

After the 12-oz aluminum can bodies are shaped, the shrink film label is applied by a BH8000S labeler and BH700 Endura® shrink tunnel from B&H Labeling Systems (Ceres, CA).

By late December ’99, the first Killian’s pub barrels for commercial sale were rolling off the line, says Frank Shriver, Coors senior packaging development engineer. The plan was to have the product available for retail sale by St. Patrick’s Day, March 17, he adds.

A 250 cpm pace

The cans roll off the can-shaping and labeling line at 250 cans/min. At the start of the U-shape line, cans are automatically depalletized before they are conveyed to ANC’s Swiss-made can-shaping equipment. The shaper forms the regular straight-wall aluminum cans into the barrel shape. Shriver says the cans, manufactured by Valley Metal, are made of heavier-than-usual gauge aluminum. This helps the shaped cans maintain compression strength for shipment.

The cans are printed by Valley with a black ring near the top so that when labeled, the small amount of can showing beneath the label at the top blends in seamlessly with the black part of the label rather than as shiny metal ring.

Shaped cans are checked for any splitting or other leaks or defects by a Reynolds rotary testing machine. It is located about 15’ downstream of the shaper. The open can end is covered by a seal while an intense light shines on the can exterior. A photo detector checks for any incoming light that would indicate a pinhole or split.

Defective cans are rejected from the line, while intact cans are conveyed onward to the labeler located on a mezzanine about 50’ away.

The roll-fed labeler uses Aerowrap® film from Salem Label (Salem, OH). Killian’s label is a 2.2-mil lamination of clear printed oriented polypropylene on the outside and an opaque white OPP inner layer. The clear film is reverse-printed flexographically in five colors. The OPP substrates are ROSO (“roll-on, shrink on”) films supplied by ExxonMobil’s Film Business (Macedon, NY). One of the main reasons Coors selected OPP film was that it believed the film to be more recyclable than alternative substrates such as polyvinyl chloride, Shriver explains.

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