Food & Drink Process & Packaging Issue 30 2020 | Page 26

Compact inspection systems become the ‘new normal’ When it comes to buying criteria for inspection equipment, whilst commercial viability will always make or break decisions, the COVID-19 crisis is pushing space-optimised design and remote diagnostics to the fore. Footprint has long been a consideration when choosing packaging and processing equipment – factory space is at a premium and the ever-increasing cost of real estate means each cubic metre has to be maximised. In production and packaging facilities where every inch counts, establishing new practices that will enable factory personnel to work safely during the COVID-19 pandemic is a huge challenge. Preventing the spread of the virus within the workplace is all about creating distance and physical barriers between workers, but space is in short supply in most facilities. MOVING PEOPLE, NOT MACHINERY Redesigning factory layouts is not easy, requiring considerable investment. However, producers have a duty of care to operators to ensure they are working in a safe environment. Rather than reconfiguring production line layouts, companies are looking at how they can redeploy and organise operators in a safer way, for example, by altering shift patterns. In other words, the focus is on moving people rather than machinery. As factories adapt to these new ways of working, Phil Brown, Managing Director of Fortress Technology, expects equipment compactness to become even more important. “From a factory floor perspective, adapting to COVID-19 is all about creating space. Smaller footprint equipment creates more space for people to move around without being restricted to certain pathways,” he says. COMBI SYSTEMS COME INTO THEIR OWN One of the ways in which companies can save line space is to opt for a combined checkweighing and metal detection system – mounting these systems on the same conveyor results in a far smaller footprint than standalone units would occupy. Combi metal detector/checkweighers are not a new concept, but last month [May], saw Fortress unveil its first ever offering in the space under the Raptor marque. Developed in collaboration with Sparc Systems, the integrated system delivers hygienic and user-friendly operation on a compact footprint. The machine’s footprint has been minimised via several design features. Clever configuration of the reject mechanisms, for example, means that they occupy 50% less space than a conventional design. “You can’t get away from the fact you need separate rejects for weighing and metal as the rework required for rejected products is very different. However, we have designed the system with opposing rather than end to end rejects, reducing the length of the reject system from one metre to 500mm,” explains Brown. 26 FDPP - www.fdpp.co.uk