Proven safety technology for flow wrapping machinexs
Whether it’s powder, liquid or solid: many products cut a better figure in a plastic pouch. Flow wrapping machines not only seal a wide range of products, they also persuade through a whole assortment of attractive pouch types. The machines work quickly and reliably, can be converted to new tasks in no time at all and take up very little space. Pilz safety technology ensures there's no conflict between productivity and safety.
With impressive speed the machine pulls the plastic web over several guide rollers and on to the forming shoulder: it is here that the film web is made into a tube package, which can be filled with pieced, powder, paste, granulated or liquid products as required. A discharge belt pulls the wrap down along the wall of the filling tube, the longitudinal sealing tool seals the film tube vertically. Once filled, the transverse sealing tool seals the packaging horizontally and the blade separates the bags. The benefits of flow wrapping: It can be adapted to suit almost any packaged product perfectly, it enables vacuum packaging and, because the film is transparent, the type and quality of the contents is clearly visible. Whether you need a stand-up, flat or side-sealed pouch: flow wrapping machines can now handle an impressive variety of shapes and solutions.
Rovema Verpackungsmaschinen GmbH is based in Germany and offers a wide range of packaging and cartoning machines for the most wide-ranging products and application areas. The Rovema Group has branches worldwide and currently employs around 700 staff. Flow wrapping machines are a key component in the Rovema portfolio. “The demand today is for intelligent packaging solutions which set standards and are based on the respective requirements at the point of sale. At the same time they must be economical and future-proof", says Walter Maurer, who is responsible for electrical design and standardisation at Rovema.
Perfect packaging in the shortest possible time
The medium-sized company supplies intermittent horizontal/vertical, continuous vertical and double axis flow wrapping machines with a linear motor. The machines are always modular and open for future tasks and trend changes. All the flow wrapping machines have compact dimensions and can be operated in stand-alone mode as well as in a network with other plant and machinery.
As shown, the packaging material on the VPL flow wrapping machine is fed from rollers and the machine operates vertically: The product to be packaged is fed in to the bag via a collection container and down-tube; the filling, sealing and separating process runs continuously. A non-wearing linear motor is the main drive for the transverse sealing station. Some of the outstanding features of the VPL flow wrapping machine include: its wide format range with high performance, the ability to store individual production programs, freely programmable sealing times and high sealing pressures, plus the vacuum film draw down unit which guarantees consistent bag lengths even with extremely thin films (from 20 µm). The high pressure of the transverse sealing tools means that the sealed seams are especially tight. The use of special magnesium alloys for moving parts minimises the mass moment of inertia and increases output. If necessary it is also easy to integrate additional features such as pulse welding, a zip strip applicator for producing re-closable bags, edge profiling and online diagnostics via modem.
Safe, efficient processes
High availability and highly automated processes require an efficient safety management in the background, which will not only exclude any risk to operators in the event of a fault but will also prevent serious damage to the machine. However, safety-related equipment must not work to the detriment of productivity. In other words: safety technology is intended to protect the operator from injury, but must not obstruct him in his work any more than is necessary. In issues concerning safety, Pilz has enjoyed an excellent reputation in the mechanical engineering sector for many years. “We choose Pilz because the company is the recognised manufacturer for safety technology on the market. That’s why our machines only leave this factory fitted with Pilz safety solutions”, stresses Walter Maurer. As with all their other flow wrapping machines, the VPL is fitted with PNOZ safety relays. When these are operated, the machine comes to an immediate stop. Non-contact electromagnetic safety switches PSENmag monitor the sliding gates and covers to ensure they are securely locked, the safety relays evaluate the signals. Should an operator open one of the access gates during the filling phase, the machine will immediately switch to a safe condition.
Rovema can now look back on fifteen years of co-operation with the safety specialists from Ostfildern near Stuttgart. One of the reasons for the successful business partnership is that the development of new packaging solutions always goes hand in hand with the integration of modern safety solutions. When it comes to new and continuing developments, Pilz is one of the first at the table as a partner for safety. “Our partnership is characterised by the quality and reliability of the products, the expertise of Pilz's external sales engineers and, finally, trusting co-operation", says Walter Maurer, summing up. An excellent basis for some good business in the future.
Showing posts with label PNOZ. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PNOZ. Show all posts
Friday, October 23, 2009
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
Safe Interaction Between Man and Machine
Modern safety and control concept leads to greater productivity
Faster, more flexible, safer – with this objective in mind, the level of automation on plant and machinery continues to advance in all industries. Both safety and control technology take these high requirements into account. If necessary, powerful components can be combined to form complete systems, which guarantee safety on the one hand, and can increase productivity on the other. If the user can adapt technology to suit his requirements, then he has a cost-effective, tailor-made solution.
In many industries, packing is still associated with manual work. Where man and machine work together, the risk of injury must be minimized to the greatest possible extent. Safety devices used to be viewed as obstructive and inconvenient, but today the opposite is true: modern safety and control concepts make handling easier, and plant and machinery more productive.
Faster thanks to the new safety concept
The semi-automatic vacuum-packing machine feeds in the bottom foil via a roller; it is then transported via a chain drive. The foil is brought up to temperature in the forming chamber; a special compressed air/forming procedure and the appropriate tool are used to create the desired tray shape for each packaged product. Staff use both hands to insert grilled sausages into the tray-shaped plastic film, six pieces per row and per pack, before the conveyor moves on and another set emerges from the forming station. After the filling station comes the sealing station: The top film seal is fed through a second roller; a vacuum pump extracts the air and thereby the oxygen. This slows down the activity of the micro-organisms, while the inflow of nitrogen prevents the sausage slices from sticking together. Finally, the top and bottom film layers are impulse sealed under pressure in the sealing chamber. The product packaging is now secure and durable. At the machine outfeed, longitudinal and transverse cutters separate the packaged product into individual trays, which are then fed into transport crates via conveyor. Two coils wind up the residual film cut from both sides.
Sprinter is the name of the latest development from Komet, manufacturer of semi and fully automatic vacuum packaging machines. The company is based in Plochingen, Germany, and has its roots in the butchers’ trade. It’s in this field in particular that Komet’s table-top units are used, as they provide an airtight seal for everything that needs to be kept fresh and preserved. Even in the butchers’ industry there appears to be an irresistible trend away from the skilled producer and towards industrial production; customers increasingly ask for ready-packed goods, so Komet is increasingly focusing on semi and fully automatic machinery. Flexible and quick to convert, they can pack items in up to eight parallel trays, depending on the packaged product and the size, with or without automatic infeed. Even non-food goods can be packaged and sealed efficiently using automated packaging machines.
Another reason why the machine is called Sprint is because, in comparison to the previous model Quickvac 2000, it can convey products to their packaging more quickly, using a less complicated procedure. That’s because of a modern safety and control concept, which Pilz developed for Komet.
Designed for maximum compatibility: sensor technology, evaluation device and visualization on the Sprinter, the multifunctional safety system PNOZmulti configures simpler, safer interaction between man and machine. The safety system has a modular structure and can be used flexibly to suit the application. Instead of wiring, the user configures the needed functions simply, in a configuration tool. This saves time, space and money because there is no longer any complex individual wiring and all the safety-related functions are located in one housing. PNOZmulti is cost effective when monitoring four or more safety functions and can also undertake standard control tasks.
By comparison the safety devices on its predecessor were simplistic and mainly based on individually wired switches and contactors. Large covers safeguarded wide-ranging potential danger zones such as the forming and sealing stations via switch contacts. The infeed area in between was narrow and only allowed a one-up arrangement.
On the Sprinter, the cover on the forming station is reduced to a minimum. Instead, an advance security slide ensures that it is impossible to reach into either the forming or the sealing station from the filling station. If the slide switch is not closed, the safety system will prevent the bottom film from being formed and stop pressing and heat-sealing in the sealing station. Propulsion drives and valves are switched off; the central PMI operator terminal (Pilz Machine Interface) receives an error message, stating the cause and the source.
Magnetic safety switches, PSENmag, monitor the mobile protective hood over the sealing station, the longitudinal and transverse cutters, and the lower positions of the lift cylinder plus the security slide on the forming/sealing station. The PNOZmulti also monitors the E-STOP and the enablers that control the heaters and valves (pneumatic + hydraulic). The risk of injury from the packaging machine, therefore, is kept to a minimum, both during operation and in setup mode. “With PNOZmulti the machine has a flexible safety concept which is really easy to adapt to our requirements. Now the infeed area has a three-up arrangement, so assembly is quicker and easier, plus the machine is more productive“, says Harald Janke, Technical Manager at Komet.
Solution for safety and standard
A modern control solution also fell within the scope of the cooperation between Komet and Pilz. The standard control technology on the Sprinter also comes in useful for automatic operation and setup mode. “People at Komet were unhappy with the existing control solution and were looking for an efficient alternative”, recalls Ralf Kessler, Applications Engineer at Pilz. Now they are using a PMI operator terminal in conjunction with a Profibus Master. A soft PLC runs under the Windows CE operating system. The standard I/O modules are logged and controlled via the PSSuniversal. The Pilz centralized control platform covers the whole I/O periphery as one system and is universally applicable. Users have three options: pure safety applications, combined safety and standard applications or exclusively conventional/standard control functions. With the grey, standard head modules it is possible to use analog and digital standard inputs and outputs on the fieldbus systems, without a functional connection to the safety technology.
On the Sprinter, the head module of the PSSuniversal is also connected to the PMI via Profibus-DP, just like the PNOZmulti. Due to the system’s modular design, the PSSuniversal can be individually adapted specifically to meet the respective requirement. If any adaptations are required, modules can simply be expanded or exchanged.
Benefitting from expertise
Pilz was also contracted to complete the electrical design, prepare the circuit diagrams and carry out the programming, including commissioning.
“As a small company with around 30 staff we are reliant on competent, reliable partners for our electrical design and programming; we need partners who know what’s happening and know what’s important to us”, says Janke, “Here we found Pilz to be a suitable partner, their technical advice was superb and the collaboration with the Pilz staff ran smoothly.”
The competence of Komet in terms of automation technology, combined with Pilz’s expertise in matters of control technology and safety, jointly produced a new vacuum packing machine that operates more productively and is therefore of greater value.
Pilz is a global company, as such, not all standards and information will be applicable worldwide. Please check with your local Pilz office to ensure your factory and/or machines meet local standards.
Faster, more flexible, safer – with this objective in mind, the level of automation on plant and machinery continues to advance in all industries. Both safety and control technology take these high requirements into account. If necessary, powerful components can be combined to form complete systems, which guarantee safety on the one hand, and can increase productivity on the other. If the user can adapt technology to suit his requirements, then he has a cost-effective, tailor-made solution.
In many industries, packing is still associated with manual work. Where man and machine work together, the risk of injury must be minimized to the greatest possible extent. Safety devices used to be viewed as obstructive and inconvenient, but today the opposite is true: modern safety and control concepts make handling easier, and plant and machinery more productive.
Faster thanks to the new safety concept
The semi-automatic vacuum-packing machine feeds in the bottom foil via a roller; it is then transported via a chain drive. The foil is brought up to temperature in the forming chamber; a special compressed air/forming procedure and the appropriate tool are used to create the desired tray shape for each packaged product. Staff use both hands to insert grilled sausages into the tray-shaped plastic film, six pieces per row and per pack, before the conveyor moves on and another set emerges from the forming station. After the filling station comes the sealing station: The top film seal is fed through a second roller; a vacuum pump extracts the air and thereby the oxygen. This slows down the activity of the micro-organisms, while the inflow of nitrogen prevents the sausage slices from sticking together. Finally, the top and bottom film layers are impulse sealed under pressure in the sealing chamber. The product packaging is now secure and durable. At the machine outfeed, longitudinal and transverse cutters separate the packaged product into individual trays, which are then fed into transport crates via conveyor. Two coils wind up the residual film cut from both sides.
Sprinter is the name of the latest development from Komet, manufacturer of semi and fully automatic vacuum packaging machines. The company is based in Plochingen, Germany, and has its roots in the butchers’ trade. It’s in this field in particular that Komet’s table-top units are used, as they provide an airtight seal for everything that needs to be kept fresh and preserved. Even in the butchers’ industry there appears to be an irresistible trend away from the skilled producer and towards industrial production; customers increasingly ask for ready-packed goods, so Komet is increasingly focusing on semi and fully automatic machinery. Flexible and quick to convert, they can pack items in up to eight parallel trays, depending on the packaged product and the size, with or without automatic infeed. Even non-food goods can be packaged and sealed efficiently using automated packaging machines.
Another reason why the machine is called Sprint is because, in comparison to the previous model Quickvac 2000, it can convey products to their packaging more quickly, using a less complicated procedure. That’s because of a modern safety and control concept, which Pilz developed for Komet.
Designed for maximum compatibility: sensor technology, evaluation device and visualization on the Sprinter, the multifunctional safety system PNOZmulti configures simpler, safer interaction between man and machine. The safety system has a modular structure and can be used flexibly to suit the application. Instead of wiring, the user configures the needed functions simply, in a configuration tool. This saves time, space and money because there is no longer any complex individual wiring and all the safety-related functions are located in one housing. PNOZmulti is cost effective when monitoring four or more safety functions and can also undertake standard control tasks.
By comparison the safety devices on its predecessor were simplistic and mainly based on individually wired switches and contactors. Large covers safeguarded wide-ranging potential danger zones such as the forming and sealing stations via switch contacts. The infeed area in between was narrow and only allowed a one-up arrangement.
On the Sprinter, the cover on the forming station is reduced to a minimum. Instead, an advance security slide ensures that it is impossible to reach into either the forming or the sealing station from the filling station. If the slide switch is not closed, the safety system will prevent the bottom film from being formed and stop pressing and heat-sealing in the sealing station. Propulsion drives and valves are switched off; the central PMI operator terminal (Pilz Machine Interface) receives an error message, stating the cause and the source.
Magnetic safety switches, PSENmag, monitor the mobile protective hood over the sealing station, the longitudinal and transverse cutters, and the lower positions of the lift cylinder plus the security slide on the forming/sealing station. The PNOZmulti also monitors the E-STOP and the enablers that control the heaters and valves (pneumatic + hydraulic). The risk of injury from the packaging machine, therefore, is kept to a minimum, both during operation and in setup mode. “With PNOZmulti the machine has a flexible safety concept which is really easy to adapt to our requirements. Now the infeed area has a three-up arrangement, so assembly is quicker and easier, plus the machine is more productive“, says Harald Janke, Technical Manager at Komet.
Solution for safety and standard
A modern control solution also fell within the scope of the cooperation between Komet and Pilz. The standard control technology on the Sprinter also comes in useful for automatic operation and setup mode. “People at Komet were unhappy with the existing control solution and were looking for an efficient alternative”, recalls Ralf Kessler, Applications Engineer at Pilz. Now they are using a PMI operator terminal in conjunction with a Profibus Master. A soft PLC runs under the Windows CE operating system. The standard I/O modules are logged and controlled via the PSSuniversal. The Pilz centralized control platform covers the whole I/O periphery as one system and is universally applicable. Users have three options: pure safety applications, combined safety and standard applications or exclusively conventional/standard control functions. With the grey, standard head modules it is possible to use analog and digital standard inputs and outputs on the fieldbus systems, without a functional connection to the safety technology.
On the Sprinter, the head module of the PSSuniversal is also connected to the PMI via Profibus-DP, just like the PNOZmulti. Due to the system’s modular design, the PSSuniversal can be individually adapted specifically to meet the respective requirement. If any adaptations are required, modules can simply be expanded or exchanged.
Benefitting from expertise
Pilz was also contracted to complete the electrical design, prepare the circuit diagrams and carry out the programming, including commissioning.
“As a small company with around 30 staff we are reliant on competent, reliable partners for our electrical design and programming; we need partners who know what’s happening and know what’s important to us”, says Janke, “Here we found Pilz to be a suitable partner, their technical advice was superb and the collaboration with the Pilz staff ran smoothly.”
The competence of Komet in terms of automation technology, combined with Pilz’s expertise in matters of control technology and safety, jointly produced a new vacuum packing machine that operates more productively and is therefore of greater value.
Pilz is a global company, as such, not all standards and information will be applicable worldwide. Please check with your local Pilz office to ensure your factory and/or machines meet local standards.
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