The
Institute of Packaging
SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENTS FOR PACKAGING
DESIGN & PALLET LOADING
Today's highly competitive global market place demands that
manufacturers and distributors drive non-value-added costs out
of the supply chain in order to become more efficient. Companies
are turning to sophisticated software programs to increase their
profitability by improving material efficiencies, reducing waste
and maximising valuable storage and transport space writes Victoria
Ayling of CAPE Systems UK.
Companies all
over the world are now using software programs to help them
evaluate each step of their product's journey throughout the
supply chain, from design concept to retailer. Advances in
technology over the last 10 years have provided the packaging
industry with a powerful tool with which to assess various
factors such as product size, case fit and arrangement and
pallet loading efficiency - with some very impressive results.
Optimising product
size and design, improving material usage, enhancing primary
package arrangement and fit within cases and increasing the
amount of cases per pallet can save companies thousands of
pounds per year. Getting more product onto a pallet has proven
to be the most effective way of reducing storage and shipping
costs. In fact, it is estimated that a company can, by putting
more product into the same space save up to 25 per cent on
storage and distribution.
In the Past
Historically, companies used laborious manual methods to calculate
pallet patterns, either creating something by hand or by using
pallet pattern and lookup tables to design very basic pattern
styles. This method was slow, inaccurate, inconsistent and
only yielded a limited amount of alternatives. The solutions
were narrow in scope and communicating the results made preplanning
difficult. With increasing mass production techniques and
the growth of product distribution on a nation-wide basis
manual methods were simply inadequate.
Computers
in Packaging
The earliest use of computers in packaging dates back
to the early 1970's when mainframes, computers the size of
rooms, were used to provide simple pallet pattern configurations
and a small amount of secondary package design - both without
the use of diagrams or graphics.
However, the
introduction of the first PC's in the mid 1980's opened up
a whole new range of possibilities for the packaging industry.
With the advantage of its small size, ease of use and computing
power, the PC brought amount many changes in the area of packaging,
where an ideal use was the creation of pallet patterns and
packaging design.
The Pallet
Pattern Process Using the Computer
During the packaging process the pallet base is usually considered
to be fixed in size and cannot be easily changed. However,
there are many variables relating to the loading of the pallet
that can be evaluated to produce the optimum pallet pattern.
These parameters include the maximum load height and weight,
underhand and overhang requirements, minimum area and cube
utilisation, the size of the corrugated case, and the dimension
loaded vertical on the pallet. The final compression strength
of the corrugated case and the various pattern styles that
can be considered for each pattern type are also important
factors to be considered.
The Benefits
of Packaging Design and Pallet Loading Software
It is virtually impossible for the human mind or a simple
lookup chart to consider the combination of all these factors
and individual user requirements. This is why today's computers
and pallet loading programs are ideally suited to the task.
In a PC based
pallet pattern loading program the user simply types in the
basic information required for the specific analysis. This
information usually consists of the corrugated case size,
the dimension vertical for stacking on the pallet, the weight
of the filled case, the dimension vertical for stacking on
the pallet, the weight of the filled case, the pallet size
and type, allowable underhang and overhang, the maximum finished
load height and weight, and the pattern types to be considered.
This information is then saved in a file format that can be
retrieved for later use and from which the various solutions
are generated.
From the information
provided by the program the user can then determine which
pallet pattern arrangement will best meet their needs. Hundreds,
even thousands, of potential solutions can be considered in
the process. The computer's calculations are consistently
accurate and enable the rapid evaluation of all patterns and
load plans that fit within the restrictions applied by the
user.
Using a software
application to calculate pallet patterns and pallet loading
efficiency means an increase in speed and consistency of solutions.
These programs are typically very easy to use with simple
data input screens and Word style pull down menus and toolbar
icons. Most impressive is the ability to replicate actual
situations on screen or in the form of reports. A large number
of alternatives can be considered at any one time and results
can be easily reproduced and communicated to other functions
and departments.
From
the list of available solutions, the user can select one or
more options for viewing and printing (both text and graphical
reports) showing the exact location of each case and the layout
of the cases within a layer on the pallet. After viewing a
satisfactory solution the user can then use the software to
model the compression strength performance of the corrugated
case.
It
is now even possible to represent shrink wrapping, create
different style trays, show dividers and create bundles of
packs in their outer packaging. And it is easy to represent
almost any product shape. These programs enable the user to
resize an existing primary pack or work with marketing departments
to design a completely new product. By starting with a proposed
size and specifying the scope for dimensional and/or volumetric
changes the program can establish the best possible primary
pack size. New pack arrangements and case sizes are created
and then palletised.
Using modern
computers to design primary and secondary packs and calculate
pallet patterns is extremely effective. Studies have shown
that a 10% improvement in pallet load utilisation is common.
In many cases improvements are much higher than 10%, which
is particularly significant as these improvements directly
affect the profitability of an organisation. In large organisations
these savings can amount to many hundreds of thousands of
pounds annually.
In addition
to increasing profitability, packaging design and pallet loading
programs can deal with very specific packaging requirements,
for example, the packaging process involved in the storage
and distribution of a sensitive product such as ice cream.
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. An ice cream manufacturer would use the space utilisation
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.
The Future
of Computerised Pallet Patterns
Today's users of computerised pallet pattern loading programs
are looking for even more sophistication and reality in their
ability to create reports and share this information with
others.
Current pallet
loading programs are very sophisticated. They are used throughout
the world to evaluate different pallet options, the best pallet
size to use and which packing medium will do the best job.
All of these tasks are now calculated in seconds. Each solution
created can be viewed as three dimensional color diagrams.
Graphics technology now allows users to select the rotation
and stacking of individual pallet layers. Even the layout
of individual cases can be edited to meet any special pattern
layout requirements. High-quality, very detailed and customised
reports can be produced in seconds.
Modern programs
can also be used to export Palletizing information directly
to other programs. Examples are word processing applications,
spreadsheets, specification systems, ERP, Supply Chain Management
and Warehousing systems. Information from pallet loading programs
can even provide the necessary information to drive robotic
and mechanical Palletizing equipment. Such information can
then be shared with other departments to create a finished-product
specification which can be easily communicated, controlled
and monitored for future updates and modifications.
Manufacturing
companies are now also beginning to understand the importance
of multiple product pallet patterns, for retail store shelf
replishment and end of aisle displays for promotional use.
Programs to deal with these 'multiproduct loading' situations
work with many of the same inputs as standard pallet loading
software. The one exception is that many different products
are calculated on the same pallet at the same time, adding
an extra level of complexity to the final solution.
For many multinational
companies, the key to future growth is exporting their products
to other countries. This means considering how to palletise
their products on at least two different pallet sizes : one
for domestic use and one for export. This type of application
is also ideally suited to modern computers and pallet loading
programs.
Technology is
now available that allows pallet loading programs to merge
artwork and graphics images (such as company or product logos)
onto the surfaces of products, cases and pallets. This brings
a new and extremely powerful visual reality to the world of
computerised pallet patterns and allows the most comprehensive
pallet pattern reports and specifications to be created at
the touch of a button.
Thousands of
European companies are now required to meet official industry
standards on using materials and storage space efficiently,
and on controlling transportation costs or face steep fines.
Through the utilisation of packaging design and Palletizing
software companies are able to design packaged products that
are price conscious, fit into inventory-sensitive outer case
sizes and can be stored and transported effectively. At the
same time efficiently designed packaging gets more product
into the same space, reduces the number of trees cut down
to make wooden pallets, and decreases the number of trucks
required for transport, thereby reducing physical damage to
the environment, cutting noise levels and reducing the amount
of fossil fuels being burned.
Companies involved
in the manufacturing and distribution of products all over
the world - from multinational corporations to single installation
factories or warehouses - simply cannot afford to ignore the
powerful, yet relatively inexpensive technology of packaging
design and pallet loading software.
|