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Plastic Jug Palletizing in Small Robot Cell

Motion Controls Robotics’ latest integration project is a small footprint robotic cell designed for plastic jug palletizing. Two different FANUC robot models share the cell and work together to palletize the gallon jugs and move new trays and dollies onto the outfeed conveyor.

challenges

Plastic Jug Palletizing – Customer Challenges

Robotic Plastic Jug Palletizing
A leading dairy producer came to MCRI to work with us to develop a robot palletizing cell for plastic gallon jugs. Their end customer required new shipping packaging that, in turn, required a new palletizing system. Another goal of the project was to reduce overall labor in the packaging room where workers routinely work in near zero temperatures.

The issues that MCRI had to address were being able to connect to the current flow of the product and making sure that rate and stack quality improved while keeping the same flexibility in stack patterns with the various dollies and trays.

Plastic Jug Palletizing – Addressing the Challenges

The amount of work required in the palletizing cell couldn’t be achieved with a single robot. A second robot was introduced to share the workload of jug handling, intermediate tray handling, and dolly handling. This way the robots can work simultaneously to complete the process. With MCRI’s highly advanced collision avoidance logic, programing allows the robots to move through the same spaces in very tight time intervals with no risk of collision. The two robots selected for this robot cell are the FANUC M410iC/185 for palletizing the milk jugs and the FANUC M710iC/50 for moving dunnage within the robot cell.

This setup combined with an efficient end of arm tool design, for the dunnage handling robot, made it possible to meet the company’s required palletizing rate.

plastic jug palletizing
sequence of operation

Sequence of Operations for Plastic Jug Palletizing

  1. Stacks of dollies and trays used for palletizing the jugs are loaded onto an infeed conveyor by an operator. Robots can continue to palletize while the operator loads dollies and tier trays into the robot cell. This is another key feature of the robot cell that allows the customer to meet their end customer production requirements.
  2. A parallel line infeed conveyor delivers two rows of plastic gallon jugs side by side to the robot pick position. The infeed conveyor is equipped with sensors that make sure the jugs are oriented correctly for robot pickup.
  3. A total of 16 jugs are released into the robot pick station (2 rows of 8). The M410’s end of arm tool picks one or two parallel rows of four jugs from the end of the conveyor depending on palletizing pattern requirements. Sensors on the M410 palletizing robot’s end of arm tool detect missing jugs at each jug position and sensors on the infeed conveyor check for the correct orientation of the jugs before they are picked. Rejected jugs are moved off the conveyor to not slow the process.
  4. Each time a layer is complete the M710 picks a tray and places it on the stack of jugs
  5. The M410 (palletizing robot) and M710 (dunnage robot) work together placing plastic jugs and trays until the stack is complete. The palletizing infeed/outfeed conveyor moves each finished stack out of the palletizing cell while the M710 moves the next empty dolly from the dolly stack infeed conveyor to the palletizing infeed conveyor.
  6. Finished loads convey to the Lantech stretchwrapper, then continue to a pallet truck pick position where an operator picks them up and moves them to a staging area or directly to a truck for shipping to the end customer.

Video Showing Plastic Jug Palletizing


robot

Robot and End of Arm Tooling

For this integration project, two robots worked together: a M410iC/185 for palletizing and FANUC M710iC/50 for handling dunnage. They use an R-30iB Plus controller and haptic teach pendant. The M710’s EOAT uses two, controlled cylinders to grip the dollies and the trays individually. The gallon jug palletizing robot’s end of arm tooling was fabricated using a proprietary 3D printing process. The grippers hold the jugs firmly, allowing rapid accel and decel of the jugs to the palletizing station. The gripper has sensors to notice if a jug is missing or has been dropped.

The Robots

Models

Payload

Reach

Download Spec Sheet

Floor Mounted
M410iC/185 185 kg 3140 mm M-410iC-185.pdf
M710iC/50 50 KG 2050 mm FANUC M710 Various Models

Plastic Jug Palletizing

✓ Safety Features

Motion Controls Robotics follows the ANSI/RIA R15.06-2012 Safety Standard designed to ensure employees and robots work safely together. We take full advantage of new safety technologies and innovations as they become available. This system is complete with safety fencing, light curtains, and sensors.

Light curtains are placed on the infeed station to allow an operator to push dollies into conveyor opening. The light curtains prevent random entry into the cell but allow dollies to be added to the process when needed. The operator requests access just before inserting the dolly into the palletizing cell. The light curtain at the full stack outfeed station allows the operator to push the finished stack out of the robot cell.

Results

Customer Results

The system was recently installed and is running at the facility. The new system maintains the end customer’s required production rate, with smooth, reliable operation. A second near identical system was installed at a sister plant and is running as well.

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