New snack chip plant is LEED-certified and IT-powered
Opened in two phases in 2010 and 2011, Shearer's Foods' Massillon plant adheres to sustainable principles and leverages dynamic software solutions to optimize efficiency.
Opened in two phases in 2010 and 2011, Shearer's Foods' Massillon plant adheres to sustainable principles and leverages dynamic software solutions to optimize efficiency.
Massillon, it should be noted, is not just any snack plant. As a bold banner in the packaging hall proudly proclaims, it’s “The First LEED Platinum Snack Food Manufacturing Plant in the World!” That is to say, the U.S. Green Building Council, under its Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design program, granted its highest level of certification to the Massillon plant.
“We’re members of the community we work and live in, and we felt it was our duty to be proactive about sustainability,” says Shearer when asked about the LEED certification. “One of the early challenges we faced is that, because no snack plant had ever been LEED-certified, there was no baseline to work off of where reductions in electricity, water, and gas are concerned. So we had some work to do just to establish those baselines.”
Like other LEED-certified plants, Massillon is distinguished by optimal insulation, high-efficiency lighting, automatic light dimmers, and heat-recovery systems that keep energy costs down. It also uses an oven in its tortilla chip operation that requires 47% less gas than ovens typically used throughout Shearer’s five plants. Also impressive is that less than 1.25% of waste produced in the plant winds up in a landfill. Zero landfill is the goal.
20 baggers
“We established what we wanted and then just duplicated it, more or less, 20 times,” says director of operations Ken Brower. “It makes sense from a maintenance and spare parts standpoint because all 20 bagging systems are the same.”
Three or four significant advancements in packaging are in evidence at the Massillon plant. Possibly the most fascinating is the tna roflo VM 3 electromagnetically driven horizontal-motion chip distribution system. It’s the means by which potato or tortilla chips are proportionately and gently distributed by way of vibrating pans from a mass flow to individual scale/bagger cells. Typically the mass flow of chips is distributed to multiple scale/bagger cells by funneling chips in considerable quantity down a straight-line main conveyor and using a series of feed conveyors—one for every scale—to take chips at a right angle from the main conveyor to the scales. Gates open or close to allow the chips onto these feed conveyors according to signals sent by the scales.
The key to its operating principle is that the conveyor pans pivot. Take, for example, the VM 3 system assigned to potato chips made on Shearer’s continuous fryer line. It consists of seven pivoting distribution pans. It receives freshly fried chips at about 4,000 pounds per hour and must distribute them proportionately to seven scales.
“The vibration of the pans can be sped up automatically if there are lots of upstream chips available,” says Brower. “But if chips are in short supply, the system will proportion out to each scale the chips it has available, and it will slow down the scales and baggers as it needs to. It might even starve the last bagger and then reactivate it when sufficient chips are available.”
Intelligent flavoring
Another “best-in-breed” example found in the packaging operation is the intelli-flav 2 flavoring system. A key component in it is a load cell that weighs the chips as they flow into the combination scale from the chip distribution system. This weight is communicated to the dispenser that drops seasonings into the chips so that the dispenser’s auger will dispense seasoning according to the real-time amount of chips that are being conveyed into the Yamato combination scale.
“It’s much more accurate than augering in the seasonings volumetrically,” says Ken Brower.
“Our efforts at capturing real-time data began in the Brewster plant, but there we were more focused on processing,” says Brower. “Now we’re linking it all together to see how processing and packaging can be more tightly integrated and, consequently, better optimized. HMI terminals throughout the plant let us see exactly how a line is running, exactly what the poundage draw is on each bagger. We see complete data from the beginning of processing to the end of packaging. Not only can I look at an individual bagger’s efficiencies, but we also have these things linked to our Management Information System, which allows me to draw several different reports in terms of bagger efficiencies, weighing accuracies, and those types of things.
“This plant is more networked than what we’ve had in the past,” Brower continues. “It used to be that machine operators would turn in their paperwork and it would go into a file. Later, that information would be keystroked into some system that others could share. But it left too many opportunities for mistakes. Doing it electronically and automatically is much better.
Dynamic Scheduler
Part of the Infinity QS program is a module called Dynamic Scheduler. It provides operators with a shop-floor checklist for quality checks that they make on one of the many HMI panels. Large windows and a user-friendly graphical interface automatically remind operators when quality data is needed. An easy-to-read schedule shows the operators a time-ordered list of the day’s required checks. Each check is accompanied by a countdown clock; the operator always knows how much time remains until the next check is due. Dynamic Scheduler takes the guesswork out of monitoring quality checks and automatically notifies key personnel by email if data collection is not performed.
The business benefit gained? “The added visibility means we have more predictability, and that means we don’t have to build safety stock in inventory,” says Brower. “It lets us prepare product closer to the time it’s scheduled to be shipped.”
It also helped the Massillon plant qualify for its Platinum LEED status. “The Wonderware program has an energy monitoring module that lets us track energy consumption in real time, which is always better than tracking it after the fact,” says Scott Heldreth, senior vice president of operations at Shearer’s.
And the next step? “We’re looking at linking downtime data with our CMMS [Computerized Maintenance Management System] to be able to alert the Maintenance Department to things that need to be addressed,” says Heldreth. The CMMS system in place, he adds, is from Maintenance Connection.
Looking back, Heldreth describes the use of IT at Massillon as something that built upon lessons learned at the Brewster plant. “At Brewster we waded into HMI and learned some valuable lessons about the recording of real-time data for subsequent analysis,” says Heldreth. “But we weren’t really controlling any of the machines. Massillon is different. We do a lot of controlling there, anything from baggers to silos to corn tanks. The pivoting chip distribution pans are a perfect example. Real-time feedback from the baggers travels over the network to the PLCs that control those distribution pans so that product can be delivered to the baggers at the pace they require.”
Source: Shearer's Foods' Inc.