Teaching retorts how to communicate

Operations management in all types of manufacturing is under constant pressure to continually achieve efficiency improvements.

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Not all processing or packaging machines are designed with identical throughput specifications. And even if they were, variations from machine to machine would inevitably skew the relative rates. Control systems of the various machines must receive feedback from other parts of the line in order for operations in world-class plants to tune the line to its optimum operating effectiveness.

Product tracking has become another key operating function given requirements both from agencies such as the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and from the need to conduct a fast and efficient product recall should that ever be required. Tracking requires information coordination among all the machines on the line.

Allpax Products, a division of Pro Mach Inc., manufactures a number of retorts for low-acid food production along with associated automation. A retort, or pressure cooker, is one of the machines on a process line that often must be taught, so to speak, to communicate directly with packaging machines, too.

Jonny Watkins, director of software engineering at Allpax, describes a typical production line producing microwavable bowls of soup. “These are now highly integrated lines. We have to interface to the packaging parts that a lot of times are not Pro Mach machines. They may be German or from other countries.”

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