applications
A look at how DCs are using equipment and
services to rev up their operations
INTERMODAL CARTAGE CO. HAD A SERIOUS PROBlem. Thieves were regularly breaking into the company’s
yard in Memphis, Tenn., and helping themselves to the
contents of the containers staged there.
Intermodal Cartage offers transportation and drayage services from the 160-
acre Memphis facility as well as several
other locations around the country. The
Memphis terminal, which can hold up
to 6,000 containers, was particularly at
risk as it’s located adjacent to rail yards
in an area noted for regular pilfering.
“Our fence was getting cut every four
to five months,” recalls Neil Taylor,
who has the dual role of manager of
the Memphis terminal and corporate
security manager. “The thieves were
‘shopping’ the containers—opening them to see what was
inside and then taking things of value,” he says.
To solve the problem, the company contracted with
Columbia, S.C.-based Electric Guard Dog to install security fencing around the perimeter of the 125 acres used for
the yard. The solution includes several security measures.
To begin with, there are warning signs in both English
and Spanish that caution intruders about the second
deterrent—a solar-powered electric fence. The fence has a
charge of 7,000 volts—enough to shock someone so that he
or she can’t climb or cut the fence, but
not enough of a charge to kill or permanently injure the intruder. The fence can
also be wired to AC power as a backup
to the solar charging system.
In addition to the surge of electric
current, a loud alarm will sound whenever someone makes contact with the
fence. An alarm company that provides
“It really comes down to our peace of mind. It is just
necessary in this day and age,” says Taylor. He reports that
Electric Guard Dog fences have also been installed at company facilities in Tennessee and Texas and those of its sister
companies where it made sense.
Intermodal Cartage Co. put an end to its yard theft problems with a solar-powered perimeter
security system.
Safe and secure
LIKE MANY FASHION RETAILERS, FOREVER 21 HAS
seen steady growth in online orders for its women’s apparel. To help keep up with the e-commerce–fueled demand,
the company three years ago installed a EuroSort bomb bay
sorter that’s capable of handling 28,800 items per hour.
Under the current work flow, workers batch-pick items
for multiple orders and place them individually onto
“trays” or compartments on the sorter track. As each item
passes by, a fixed laser scanner reads its bar code. Based
on that read, the sorter’s software tells the system when to
release the item. At the right time, the system opens the
tray, much the way a military aircraft’s bomb bay doors
open, gently dropping the item into the appropriate desti-
nation bin below.
Sorter errors have been greatly reduced since Forever 21 replaced its laser scanners with
image-based readers.
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