LM    Topics 

Robotic palletizing system enables track and trace quality control

New system design greatly reduces time spent tracking nonconforming product.


Lorillard Tobacco, a 250-year-old company headquartered in Greensboro, N.C., produces approximately 40 billion cigarettes each year. Its 1-million-square-foot plant houses 36 packaging lines that produce 41 different product types. In response to new industry regulations in 2009, the company installed a robotic palletizer to ensure visibility and control of product quality.

The company had used a multi-line palletizing system at the facility for more than 30 years, with all 36 production lines feeding two conventional high-speed palletizers. Although the legacy system met all requirements for throughput, reliability and safety, its design caused difficulty when tracing defects and damage back from pallets to production lines.

“If you had a problem on one packaging line but had six others that were producing perfect product, finding the defect required you to search through all of the cases produced during that time period, regardless of packaging line,” says Randy Marshall, senior staff engineer for Lorillard. “If we installed a new multi-line palletizing solution, it had to be completed in a very short amount of time. I couldn’t figure out how to do it, nor was I willing to accept the risk of shutting this factory down.”

The end-of-line operation presented a unique set of challenges. Most importantly, the pallets must be composed exclusively of cases from the same production line to enable easier track-and-trace capability throughout the plant. The system must also accommodate eight different case sizes, each with its own stacking pattern.

The solution they chose includes 18 robotic palletizing cells (Intelligrated, intelligrated.com), each serving two of the facility’s 36 production lines, a design that includes significantly less conveyor than before. The compact footprint of the robotic system enables a system design with a direct connection between the palletizing cell and each production line.

“It’s a very simple way to palletize cases,” Marshall explains. “It makes traceability much easier.”

The installation of each robotic palletizing cell took place over a four-week schedule, which required shutting down two of the production lines for two weeks. After the first cell finished testing, the phased rollout process continued until the final cell 22 months later.


Article Topics

Intelligrated
Packaging
Productivity Solution
   All topics

Latest in Logistics

UPS announces CFO Newman to leave company, effective June 1
Preliminary April North American Class 8 net orders are mixed
Senators take a close look at Amazon with Warehouse Worker Protection Act
Despite American political environment, global geopolitical risks could be easing
Maryland DOT: $1.9 billion and up to four years to rebuild bridge sunk near Baltimore port
April Services PMI contracts after 15 months of growth, reports ISM
2023 industrial big-box leasing activity heads down but remains on a steady path, notes CBRE report
More Logistics

About the Author

Josh Bond
Josh Bond was Senior Editor for Modern through July 2020, and was formerly Modern’s lift truck columnist and associate editor. He has a degree in Journalism from Keene State College and has studied business management at Franklin Pierce University.
Follow Modern Materials Handling on FaceBook

Subscribe to Logistics Management Magazine

Subscribe today!
Not a subscriber? Sign up today!
Subscribe today. It's FREE.
Find out what the world's most innovative companies are doing to improve productivity in their plants and distribution centers.
Start your FREE subscription today.

May 2024 Logistics Management

May 2, 2024 · As the days of slow, invisible supply chains that “worked behind the scenes” continue to fade in the rearview mirror, companies are improving their demand forecasting, gaining real-time visibility across their networks and streamlining their operations—and its software that makes that all possible.

Latest Resources

Warehouse/DC Automation & Technology: Time to gain a competitive advantage
In our latest Special Digital Issue, Logistics Management has curated several feature stories that neatly encapsulate the rise of the automated systems and related technologies that are revolutionizing how warehouse and DC operations work.
The Ultimate WMS Checklist: Find the Perfect Fit
Reverse Logistics: Best Practices for Efficient Distribution Center Returns
More resources

Latest Resources

2024 Transportation Rate Outlook: More of the same?
2024 Transportation Rate Outlook: More of the same?
Get ahead of the game with our panel of analysts, discussing freight transportation rates and capacity fluctuations for the coming year. Join...
Bypassing the Bottleneck: Solutions for Avoiding Freight Congestion at the U.S.-Mexico Border
Bypassing the Bottleneck: Solutions for Avoiding Freight Congestion at the U.S.-Mexico Border
Find out how you can navigate this congestion more effectively with new strategies that can help your business avoid delays, optimize operations,...

Driving ROI with Better Routing, Scheduling and Fleet Management
Driving ROI with Better Routing, Scheduling and Fleet Management
Improve efficiency and drive ROI with better vehicle routing, scheduling and fleet management solutions. Download our report to find out how.
Your Road Guide to Worry-Free Shipping Between the U.S. and Canada
Your Road Guide to Worry-Free Shipping Between the U.S. and Canada
Get expert guidance and best practices to help you navigate the cross-border shipping process with ease. Download our free white paper today!
Warehouse/DC Automation & Technology: It’s “go time” for investment
Warehouse/DC Automation & Technology: It’s “go time” for investment
In our latest Special Digital Issue, Logistics Management has curated several feature stories that neatly encapsulate the rise of automated systems and...