Case coders sparkle at Blue Diamond

New equipment delivers three lines of type for bulk boxes of nuts. The case coders reduce labor costs, downtime, and ink loss associated with previous units.

A Blue Diamond technician makes a keypad adjustment to a new case coder (above). Each coder codes up to three lines of type on a
A Blue Diamond technician makes a keypad adjustment to a new case coder (above). Each coder codes up to three lines of type on a

Like many companies, Blue Diamond Growers finds that it makes economic sense to continue to use older packaging machinery as long as the equipment is still effective. But when its aging case coders began to hinder operational efficiency, the Sacramento, CA-based nut cooperative replaced the units. The new case coders have reduced downtime, decreased labor costs, and virtually eliminated ink loss.

Added early last year, the six Model 5000 case coders are supplied by Markem (Keene, NH). They replace older case-coding equipment that used only liquid ink. “We had major problems with keeping the former machines running,” notes Blue Diamond development engineer Rob Brougher. “For some reason, we’d lose whole bottles of ink that would just siphon out of the reservoir, through the printhead, and out onto the floor. Each bottle cost $250. When that happened, the line was down until the mess could be cleaned up, which usually took an hour. We worked with the supplier on it, but they couldn’t figure it out.

“It was extremely messy, too,” Brougher continues. “We were using pans to catch the ink that was draining, and technicians had to wear gloves to change the printheads. They had ink on their shoes and pants, and often smudges would get on the boxes.”

He says, “We had to have a technician there a minimum of four hours a day just to handle print problems on the five machines. The technician spent most of his time trying to purge the units. We reached a point once where we were down for about a month.”

“Toward the end, we had one or two lines down permanently because we couldn’t get the coders fixed,” adds Bob Krull, systems specialist engineer.

While Blue Diamond looked to upgrade from these older coders, it still needed to print cases to ready boxes for shipment. To do so, the company “preprinted boxes with an old roller coder at our print shop that we use for other lines in our plant,” says Krull. “We had to hire labor to do that, and it also cost us a lot of time. And if we couldn’t use all the preprinted cases, we had to try to store them or throw them away.”

New units a “bargain”

Brougher tells Packaging World that the cooperative first found out about the Markem equipment at Pack Expo Las Vegas 1999. “We realized the print definition was better than that of other high-resolution units that we had considered. The graphics were pretty impressive.”

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