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Meating the brief

2022-03-08 foodanddrinktechnology

Tag: Meat catering livestock sausages

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In the 1960s, an increasingly tough farming industry led livestock farmer Martin Smith and his father to look at diversification. The Wetherby farm gradually established itself as a catering butcher and Sykes House Farm is now one of the best known meat suppliers in Yorkshire, UK, enjoying strong relationships with restaurants, hotels, pubs, schools and care homes. In recent years, the family butcher has also branched out into retail, supplying the major multiples with meat products such as sausages and burgers for sale under various brands.

Originally, the company was hand stamping date codes onto sleeves destined for retailers. This was not only a time and labour intensive process, but also one that was open to human error.

A date coding error that resulted in a costly product recall was the catalyst for Sykes House Farm to embark on a search for a more reliable solution for coding sleeves for packs of bacon, sausages and burgers.

"We wanted to remove the margin for human error with a machine on which the codes are generated via software, while at the same time increasing the speed of the coding operation to keep pace with our growing retail business," says Robert Smith, managing director of the third generation family business.

On-site demonstration

But finding the right coder was far less straightforward than he expected.

"A lot of companies use online inkjet coders to apply date codes. We couldnt do that because with each order, the design of the sleeve is different and the coding area is in a different position. On bacon, for example, the use-by date tends to be on the back of the pack, wheras on sausages it is usually on the front of the pack," explains Smith.

After a two-year search, which resulted in just one astronomical quote, in 2016, Sykes House Farm found Rotech, a Hertfordshire specialist in coding, marking and feeding systems. Rotechs recommendation – the RF-Lite – came in at a more realistic £7,000, supplied complete with a thermal inkjet printer.

"From then on, it was pretty straightforward," recalls Robert. "We told Rotech what we wanted and sent them samples of our sleeves; they then came up with a solution and offered us a free on-site demonstration."

Entry level system

The RF-Lite is an entry level carton and sleeve coding system that is ideal for food packers and processors who are looking to make the step up from a manual coding operation.

"In developing the RF-Lite, we were effectively realising our dream of driving the cost out of offline coding, without driving out the quality. We wanted to build a coder that was easy to buy, easy to set up and easy to use, bringing the benefits of automated marking within the reach of smaller food manufacturers for the first time," says Richard Pether, director of Rotech.

The RF-Lite takes flat cardboard sleeves or cartons from a hopper, feeds them through a printer so they can be coded, and stacks them again ready for use.

Smith says he liked the fact the coder was "relatively simple, which meant there wasnt much to go wrong".

Easily adjusted

Also important to Sykes House Farm was the systems ability to code anywher on the sleeve and for the position of the code to be varied with each run. The RF-Lite can also handle pack shapes and sizes ranging anywher from 40mm x 70mm to 300mm x 200mm and can be easily adjusted to swap between sizes.

"It only takes a few seconds to swap between sizes by adjusting the size of the hopper. This involves loosening a screw, making the adjustment and tightening it back up – all without the need for any special tools or training," says Pether.

The machines linear speed is 60m/s, which means it can handle just under 200300mm sleeves or around 250200mm sleeves per minute, and all on a tiny 500500mm footprint.

Clear, clean, crisp

Rotech delivered the coder last November, programmed to restrict operator control.

"The coder was set up to automatically generate use-by dates for each product, removing the potential for an operator to input the wrong date," explains Smith. "At the same time, there is a facility to retrieve operator control and alter the date in the event of, say, production running a day late."

Sykes House Farm is coding around 4,000 sleeves a week with the RF-Lite and says this takes a fraction of the time it used to take with the manual system.

"Automating our coding operation has massively reduced the amount of time we spend on coding; what used to take an hour now takes five minutes with the RF-Lite. The codes look a lot more professional than with the hand stamper – the thermal inkjet printer produces codes that are clear, clean and crisp and, most importantly, we are now completely confident that there is no risk of packs being coded with the wrong date. Its a machine we should have bought three years ago; we just didnt know wher to buy it," concludes Smith.

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