Bush Brothers sticks it to glue problems

New can label adhesive applicators reduce adhesive use by 25%.

Pw 8387 Bushs Beans06 1a

One of the improvements Bush Brothers, Augusta, WI, made last year to its canning operations was revamping a wraparound labeler. The baked-bean processor also changed the way it applied the hot-melt adhesive that permits the labels to stick to the cans. That change has reduced glue use, improved safety, and cut maintenance and clean-up time.

The refurbished 1985 vintage, 48-head glue labeler was outfitted in September 2006 with a new PatternJet™ Labeling System glue application system from Nordson Corp. (www.nordson.com). The PatternJet applies adhesive to labels for five sizes of food cans—211x300, 300x407, 307x306, 307x 409, and 307x512—at rates to 1100 cans/min.

One of the key benefits to the PatternJet is a reduction in adhesive usage by 20 to 30%, according to Bush Brothers maintenance manager Steve Chowanec.

The PatternJet system replaced a wheel-pot adhesive system, which has been a standard method used in plants for more than 30 years. It comprises a hot melt adhesive, heated in a reservoir, that’s pumped to a roll that applies the adhesive directly onto the can wall and lap area of the label to close the seam. It is an open-air, direct-contact system that prompted concerns associated with the high temperatures—the adhesive is heated to 300º F—and fumes around the operator, according to Chowanec.

By contrast, PatternJet—introduced about two years ago—uses an enclosed system with spraying of the adhesive.

The system uses two PatternJet guns. The first PatternJet applicator, called the pick-up gun, applies adhesive to the can, which is held spinning on one of the labeler’s 48 spindles. Mounted on a stand, it comprises six modules, each with a nozzle. A no-can, no-application sensor confirms the presence of a can before it applies a “mini-swirl” pattern to the can wall.

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