Oversized products can be difficult to wrap securely for
shipping. Just ask Surtech Industries. Surtech is a metal
finishing subcontractor located in York, Pa., that provides polishing, powder coating, finishing, and packaging
services for a variety of customers. Among the products it
processes are long bar stock, tubular materials, flat metal
sheets, and other polished metals that must be wrapped
to protect their finish during
shipping.
Wrapping these products
was something of a challenge.
“In the past, we had wands that
we would put stretch wrap on
and then hand wrap the products,” explains Terry Spisak,
the company’s president. He
says it was usually a two-man
job that took about five minutes to complete.
Today, that’s no longer the
case. Wrapping has become
much easier since Surtech purchased a semiautomatic Tab
Wrapper Tornado, an orbital
wrapping system from Reading,
Pa.-based Tab Industries. The
system automatically wraps
protective stretch film horizontally 360 degrees around and
under the pallet. (The horizontal wrapper works differently from most automatic stretch wrappers, which wrap
vertically and usually don’t wrap beneath the load.) The
result is a fully unitized load that protects the product
from weather as well as damage incurred in transportation and warehouse handling.
Part of the reason for Surtech’s choice of wrapper was
financial. “We looked at other stretch wrappers, but
they were just too expensive,” recalls Spisak. “The Tab
Wrapper Tornado fit the need. It is a good, cost-effective
solution.”
Surtech ordered the 100-inch model that accommo-
dates a 60- by 60-inch skid and products up to 10 feet in
length. (Tab Industries also offers a 40-inch model that
handles 24- by 24-inch skids and an 80-inch model that
accepts 48- by 48-inch skids in addition to custom-sized
machines.)
The company also purchased an “automation” package that includes an automated cut-and-wrap device and a
wireless remote that the forklift
driver can operate from the
truck. To wrap a load, the driver simply places it into the unit
and presses the start button on
the remote. Once the process is
complete, the driver presses the
stop button on the remote and
drives away with the wrapped
pallet.
Not having to leave the truck
to wrap products has saved a
great deal of time, not to mention labor (with the new unit,
only one person is required for
wrapping, instead of two). The
process takes about a minute,
compared with five minutes for
manual wrapping.
Surtech has also saved on
materials costs. That’s partly because the Tab Wrapper
Tornado wraps products more tightly than can be
accomplished manually, which has cut down on the
amount of wrapping material needed. It’s also because
metal banding is no longer required. Spisak says the
company saw a return on its investment in the wrapper
in just nine months based on the materials savings alone.
On top of that, the units are easy to maintain. Though
semiautomatic, the wrappers are not complex machin-
ery. They contain basic nonproprietary parts, making any
needed repairs easy, according to Spisak.
For Surtech Industries, an orbital wrapper has eliminated the need to manually wrap oversized
metal goods.
Wrapping up savings