NEW EVENT! Cutting-edge Trends for Every Industry at PACK EXPO Southeast
Discover packaging & processing solutions for all industries at the all-new PACK EXPO Southeast in Atlanta, GA, March 10-12, 2025

Less time + less labor and materials = savings

Sensor maker Sensotec employs retention packaging that saves in labor and material costs, while delivering consistent protection.

After folding two side flaps, an operator inserts the sensor product (above) between the package's corrugated and film material.
After folding two side flaps, an operator inserts the sensor product (above) between the package's corrugated and film material.

Sensotec has cut its packaging time and labor costs in half and reduced material costs by about $10ꯠ per year by eliminating a corrugated box-within-a-corrugated box packaging configuration to safeguard shipments of its sensitive sensors. It also eliminated the use of various dunnage materials.

Replacing those materials is Korrvu® retention packaging from Sealed Air’s Special Products Group (Danbury, CT). Korrvu includes a flat corrugated “retention frame.” A clear, elastomeric film is spot glued over a die-cut area on the frame. When the frame’s scored side flaps are folded upward, the resilient film loosens, forming a pocket into which a sensor is placed. The flaps are then folded back down to tighten the film and retain the sensor securely between the film and the corrugated frame. Those components are then inserted into a corrugated shipping case.

The Korrvu packaging represents a considerable packaging improvement, according to Carl Ballard, purchasing agent for Columbus, OH-based Sensotec. At its nearly 90ꯠ sq’ Columbus plant, the company designs and manufactures pressure transducers, load cells, and electronic sensor instruments used in industries as varied as automotive, medical, aviation, and welding. For packaging-related applications, Sensotec makes instruments used in drop testing and vibration analysis.

“We have around 80ꯠ products, in weights from ounces to hundreds of pounds,” Ballard estimates. “In the past, we typically wrapped a product in bubble material, applied masking tape, and put it in a corrugated box,” he adds. “Then we put that box into a larger corrugated box because we were concerned with the integrity of the package.” Packing station workers often added expanded polystyrene peanuts, foam dunnage, and paper within the outer case.

“We were successful in that we had very little product damage, but the problem was that one week a product might be packed one way, the next week another. We were challenged by the consistency and the professionalism of the package [interior] that went to the customer,” Ballard admits. The most pressing internal concern was the time (and labor) involved in packaging the instruments.

“If we were packing the same product day in and day out, it would be one thing,” he continues. “But we’re dealing with a multitude of product sizes and configurations. On top of that, our business continues to grow.”

Building consistency

Ballard explains that a few years ago Sensotec began a search for an alternative packaging process. It explored the idea of shrink-packaging systems, “but the investment in machines, determining how to cut board for all our products, how to shrink it properly, and the labor involved,” concerned the company. “And I’ve already got enough equipment in this building to maintain,” he adds. “We looked at air-filled packaging systems, and unique die-cuts,” he continues.

INTRODUCING! The Latest Trends for All Industries at PACK EXPO Southeast
The exciting new PACK EXPO Southeast 2025 unites all vertical markets in one dynamic hub, generating more innovative answers to your production challenges. Don’t miss this extraordinary opportunity for your business!
Read More
INTRODUCING! The Latest Trends for All Industries at PACK EXPO Southeast
New e-book on Flexible Packaging
In this e-book, you’ll learn key considerations for vertical and horizontal f/f/s and how to choose between premade bags and an f/f/s system. Plus, discover the pitfalls to avoid on bagging machinery projects.
download
New e-book on Flexible Packaging