Design for Automation
There is a reason why food gets delivered in trays. Trays are cost-effective and increasingly environmentally friendly. And they prolong the foods end-date, which again lowers the impact on the climate. Trays are not about to be replaced, not even if moulding technology finds it ways into the production lines also – that’s just another risk factor for downtime, if we keep adding more processes into the line.
Trays are an efficient, proven and sound solution for Food Packaging. But still not perfected. There are tens of thousands of tray variants in use today. Different sizes, materials and shapes. A tray should of course be designed for the product it should contain. Cheese slices and ready-meal packaging are two different scenarios altogether.
And defining the product is where the value chain often kicks off. Food Manufacturing starts with the product, then looks for the trays to put the product in. And lastly, look for the technology to denest the trays and load the products into them, before sealing and handling the packages preparing them for shipment.
But what if we changed the value chain a bit? What would happen if the tray was designed for automation and denesting first, and the product secondary?
Of course, the tray should honor and uphold the same level of hygiene and keeping the product just as fresh as it normally would. But could cost efficiency be pushed even further?