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Challenging Cheese Products Packed Efficiently with New Robotic Cartoner

Inconsistently sized blisters of sliced cheese present a challenge when it comes to placing the same number of packs in a carton. New robotic system provides the solution.

New cartoning equipment from Schubert for Jermi
F4 robots take the plastic blisters from the product belt and immediately group them in the correct position on the Transmodul.

German Cheese producer and supplier Jermi regularly supplies supermarkets with sliced cheese such as Gouda and Edam. Plastic blisters containing varying types of cheese are packaged in display cartons for this purpose. Jermi needed a new packaging line to make the existing production significantly more efficient. To achieve this, a special challenge in the packaging process had to be mastered: The more holes a packaged, sliced cheese has, the higher the plastic blister will be. The packing heights of the blisters therefore vary constantly. To tackle this difficulty packaging equipment supplier Schubert developed an efficient system for Jermi.

What began 120 years ago at Jermi Käsewerk GmbH with the production of cheese and butter for the local population has developed over four generations into an internationally active company with 370 employees. Still based in Laupheim-Baustetten near Ulm, Germany, Jermi produces its own processed and fresh cheese specialities and supplies sales, gastronomy, and food manufacturers in the sector.

An important part of the production is packing the plastic blisters containing the sliced cheese into cartons, which Jermi then delivers to supermarkets. Well-known varieties such as Gouda, Tilsiter, butter cheese, or Edam, which are available in blisters weighing 250 or 400 g, are packed into Retail Ready display cartons with folding tabs on the front. Most frequently, discounters make use of these convenient package sizes. The handy cartons can be quickly placed on the store shelves so that customers can easily remove the individual blisters. In order to better meet the great demand, Jermi planned to increase production to double the output. For this purpose, the company planned to invest in a packaging system that could pack the plastic blisters fully automatically and efficiently into the secondary packaging.

Variable product height is a challenge

Sliced cheese types with holes also share an unusual feature: The number of cheese slices per blister must be adjusted to ensure the weight of goods is identical in every pack. Slices with a lot of holes require more volume at the same weight. Says Kanellos Tzinieris, the responsible Area Sales Manager at Schubert, “For this reason, the deep-drawn plastic packaging varies in height. Blisters also bulge where cheese slices have plenty of holes. This means that more protective gas enters the packaging and can expand further.” The result is that different quantities of packs fit into the carton using the former system.

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