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Food
Processing (USA)
SIZING UP PACKAGES AND PALLETS
Space
Analysis Software Help's Dreyer's Target Opportunities
How
you design your primary, secondary and tertiary packaging
can make a difference to your bottom line. Dreyer's Grand
Ice Cream Inc., headquartered in Oakland, California, firmly
believes in that premise. As Michael Vincent, group leader
for package engineering, told FOOD PROCESSING, "You've really
got to mentally walk the route of your packaged products and
understand where those packages are going to be every step
of the way. What kinds of pallet, truck, and store display
conditions are they going to encounter? Then you can maximise
space utilization and minimize product damage and throwaway.
But this can involve analyzing numerous different package,
tray and pallet combinations and configurations."
To assist
in that mental exercise, Dreyer's employs space analysis software.
One program the processor uses regularly is the CAPE PACK
from CAPE Systems, Plano, Texas. "After demo-ing this software,"
says Vincent, "we found the output to be correct, consistent
and flexible enough to adapt to our particular environment.
So we decided to put it in place as a design and specification
tool."
The Windows based
CAPE PACK offers the ability to calculate volume with established
case sizes and to view how a pallet load will configure in
a truck, trailer or sea container. It also offers the ability
to demonstrate how a product will appear during store delivery
in the case or tray. This feature can assist in marketing
and in satisfying specific retailer display requirements.
In addition, the system includes a primary container analysis
feature that helps processors evaluate how various package
shapes/sizes score in terms of durability, space efficiency,
and packaging materials economy.
Ice cream
needs air
One of the critical requirements in palletizing ice cream
products is to ensure that the pallets are not stacked too
tightly. Insufficient air flow through the pallet during on-pallet
hardening (freezing) can adversely affect ice cream quality.
Dreyer's uses the space utilization software to experiment
with various combinations of column stack and interlock stack
pallet patterns and evaluates how those patterns perform in
terms of compression strength, load stability and air flow.
Product-by-product
analyses
Vincent offered two specific examples of how the software
has helped Dreyer's improve efficiencies in the distribution
of its products. First, Dreyer's had been packaging ice cream
frozen novelties 12 cartons per case in RSC (regular slotted
container) corrugated shippers. One concern is to have the
right varieties and flavors at the right location at the right
time without ending up with surplus product.
"We have received feedback from our route truck
sales force indicating a smaller case count might be better.
So we examined different case designs,, did compression tests,
and ultimately decided to switch these novelty items to a
new shipping container design. We increased distribution
efficiencies by adding 20 percent more product per pallet,
significantly reduced our corrugated materials costs, and
source-reduced our corrugated usage by approximately 1 million
pounds annually," says Vincent.
One of Dreyer's
newest product lines is sherbet in tapered convolute containers.
Vincent reports, "Tapered containers pose special space-efficiency
problems. But by going from square bundle packs to rectangular
bundles, we accomplished a 30 percent improvement in pallet
efficiency for the sherbets."
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