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Eagle Rock: Automation with a purpose

Layer picking lift trucks and motor-driven roller conveyor power Eagle Rock’s new order fulfillment system.


Eagle Rock Distributing Co.
Stone Mountain, Ga.
Size: 75,000 square feet plus 23,000 square feet of reserve storage
Products: 57 different brands of beer, wine and spirits
Stock keeping units: 1,175
Throughput: 5.7 to 5.8 million cases per year
Warehouse employees: 25
Shifts per day/days per week: Morning shift, 6 days a week for receiving and putaway; evening shift, 5 days a week for picking and shipping
Read Eagle Rock’s story of how they decided to automate.

Eagle Rock’s order fulfillment system was designed to automate manual processes that could be cost-justified through the more efficient use of space and labor.

Receiving: Eagle Rock receives truckloads of beer in the receiving and shipping area (1) from the breweries it serves. Pallets are unloaded with a double-pallet handling forklift to a drop-off location in the climate-controlled warehouse.

Putaway: Pallets are not bar code labeled. Instead, the warehouse is divided up into reserve storage areas (2) on the floor designated for specific brands and products. Once a lift truck driver puts a pallet away into a reserve storage location (2), the inventory is manually entered into a mobile computer, which updates the inventory management system. That product is now available to fill orders. The facility features pallet rack storage in a non-climate controlled portion of the warehouse (not shown) for products that aren’t temperature sensitive.

Picking: There are two picking processes at Eagle Rock: layer quantity picking and less-than layer quantity picking.

Layer quantity picking: The fastest-moving high volume items are picked from floor-level storage locations in the Cascade picking area (3). The work area is named after the layer-picking attachment that enables lift trucks to pick a layer of product at a time. The layer is deposited on an unscrambler and singulator (4). This devices unscrambles a layer of cases into a single file that is then conveyed (5) one case at a time to a sequencing and buffering area (6) located on a mezzanine above the floor. There, product is staged for delivery in sequence to a palletizing area (12) on the floor level. If an order does not use all of the cases in the layer, the remaining cases are temporarily stored in the buffering area until the next order.

Less-than layer quantity picking: Slow- and medium-moving cases that are generally ordered in less-than-layer quantities are picked from a multi-level picking area (7). The second and third levels have two-deep pallet positions for medium-moving items. The floor level has traditional carton flow rack for the slowest-moving items. Picking instructions are transmitted to mobile wrist computers worn by order selectors in the three-level mezzanine. The order selectors pick from a pallet rack to a conveyor (8) serving that area. The cases travel to the end of the mezzanine where they are transported by a spiral conveyor (9) up to the sequencing and buffering area (6). Once they reach the sequencing and buffering area, the warehouse management system (WMS) sequences the delivery of cases in the order they will be palletized. A three-lane merge (10) inducts the cases onto one of six lanes of palletizing conveyor (11) that delivers them to a palletizing area (12) on the floor level.

Packing/shipping: Cases are manually palletized (12) or stacked on a customer cart near the receiving and shipping area (1). Carts hold up to 25 cases of bottles and up to 50 cases of cans. Once a pallet or cart is complete, it is taken by a walkie rider or pallet truck to the receiving and shipping area (1), where it is staged, stretch wrapped and loaded in the reverse order of how pallets or carts will be removed from the truck on a delivery route.

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Article Topics

Automation
Cascade
Conveyors
Eagle Rock
Food and Beverage
Hyster
Interroll
Material Handling Technologies
Motorola Solutions
System Report
Unarco
Warehouses
   All topics

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About the Author

Bob Trebilcock's avatar
Bob Trebilcock
Bob Trebilcock is the executive editor for Modern Materials Handling and an editorial advisor to Supply Chain Management Review. He has covered materials handling, technology, logistics, and supply chain topics for nearly 30 years. He is a graduate of Bowling Green State University. He lives in Chicago and can be reached at 603-852-8976.
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