contents...contents compounding 56 matching pelletizer to application is key for processors....

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4 Plastics Machinery Magazine April 2016 Contents Compounding 56 Matching pellezer to applicaon is key for processors. Injection Molding 59 Machinery, automaon and tooling at MD&M West. 61 Arburg debuts new electric machine series. Molds & Tooling 62 RocTool shows new thermoforming opon. Short Runs 63 Keeping up with industry suppliers. Names to Know 64 Promoons, rerements, new posions. Industry Events 66 Trade shows, workshops, seminars and webinars. Checking in with SPI 68 New duty drawback rules benefit U.S. manufacturers. In Other Words 74 Ken Bullivant, founder of Plastrac Inc. Talking Points 6 PMM co-launches recycling magazine, adds editorial staff. Special Report: Process Monitoring 9 Kistler, Priamus simplify systems. 12 Vision-based unit monitors blow molding. 14 New systems add value in extrusion. 15 Universal monitoring systems gain funconality. 19 Machinery makers offer monitoring systems. Product Innovations The latest new products and technology. 25 PRIMARY EQUIPMENT 28 AUXILIARY EQUIPMENT 35 MOLDS & TOOLING 40 INNOVATION EXTRAS On the Factory Floor 47 Empire Precision Plascs uses rigorous process to select equipment. Additive Manufacturing 51 Is 3-D prinng a threat to injecon molding? Recycling 54 R&D keeps Vecoplan thriving. ON THE COVER: Kistler Instrument Corp.’s injecon molding monitoring system includes its ComoNeo device and touch-screen display. INSIDE PMM | APRIL 2016 12 Plastrac Inc. Intravis Inc. 74 29 Reducon Engineering Scheer

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Page 1: Contents...Contents Compounding 56 Matching pelletizer to application is key for processors. Injection Molding 59 Machinery, automation and tooling at MD&M West. 61 Arburg debuts new

4 Plastics Machinery Magazine April 2016

Contents

Compounding 56 Matching pelletizer to application is key

for processors.

Injection Molding 59 Machinery, automation and tooling at

MD&M West.

61 Arburg debuts new electric machine series.

Molds & Tooling62 RocTool shows new thermoforming

option.

Short Runs63 Keeping up with industry suppliers.

Names to Know64 Promotions, retirements, new positions.

Industry Events66 Trade shows, workshops, seminars and

webinars.

Checking in with SPI68 New duty drawback rules benefit U.S.

manufacturers.

In Other Words74 Ken Bullivant, founder of Plastrac Inc.

Talking Points 6 PMM co-launches recycling magazine,

adds editorial staff.

Special Report: Process Monitoring

9 Kistler, Priamus simplify systems.

12 Vision-based unit monitors blow molding.

14 New systems add value in extrusion.

15 Universal monitoring systems gain functionality.

19 Machinery makers offer monitoring systems.

Product InnovationsThe latest new products and technology.25 PRIMARY EQUIPMENT28 AUXILIARY EQUIPMENT35 MOLDS & TOOLING40 INNOVATION EXTRAS

On the Factory Floor47 Empire Precision Plastics uses rigorous

process to select equipment.

Additive Manufacturing51 Is 3-D printing a threat to injection

molding?

Recycling 54 R&D keeps Vecoplan thriving.

ON THE COVER: Kistler Instrument Corp.’s injection molding monitoring system includes its ComoNeo device and touch-screen display.

INSIDE PMM | APRIL 2016

12

Plas

trac

Inc.

Intr

avis

Inc.

74

29

Redu

ction

Eng

inee

ring

Sche

er

Page 2: Contents...Contents Compounding 56 Matching pelletizer to application is key for processors. Injection Molding 59 Machinery, automation and tooling at MD&M West. 61 Arburg debuts new

12 Plastics Machinery Magazine April 2016

Vision-based system monitors

blow moldingBy Mikell Knights

INTRAVIS Inc., Norcross, Ga., in February launched IntraVisualizer, its first production monitoring system that uses the data from its inspection systems to create charts and graphs of production data. The company is a supplier of inline vision inspection systems that check blow molded bottles, injection molded preforms and closures, and label registration on bottles.

“We collect a lot of data with our multi-camera vision systems on our Watcher inspection prod-ucts. Dimensional data, material data and color data are some of the information that is captured. We can use our equipment to see what is hap-pening within the production environment,” said President Andreas Mueller.

Intravis developed IntraVisualizer to cor-relate production information derived from

vision-based inspection into more usable fig-ures and graphs the operator can understand and act on. IntraVisualizer requires little operator training. It has a browser-based interface with a touch screen that can be located off the plant floor.

Users can populate the display screen of the monitor with product quality statistics of their choosing. Production data for different time periods can be created and grouped. The data include production rate over a shift or a day and cavity faults and product rejects.

MONITORING SYSTEM PIGGYBACKS ON VISION INSPECTION

The IntraVisualizer production monitoring system is an add-on to the Watcher series of inspection systems, which provide real-time data on the production environment. The IntraVisu-alizer system can tie into three of the company’s vision inspection products, including Label-Watcher 360, which is designed to inspect the labels on cylindrical blow molded containers from all sides at a rate of 10 containers per second. “Label offset is important to monitor because a label is usually applied after the bottle is filled and

capped. An offset label turns the finished bottle from a good product into scrap,” said Mueller.

Intravis also offers CapWatcher III, the third generation of its closure inspection unit, which employs six high-resolution color cameras to capture images of each closure inline at production speeds of up to 240,000 closures per hour. The vision system can spot tiny holes in the part and handle translucent closures and bottles with low side wall heights and small tamper-evident bands.

CALL TODAYABOUT SPECIALSPRING SAVINGS.1-855-788-6655

>Data-Driven Molding>Mold Design Fundamentals>Managing a Molding Plant

www.PaulsonTraining.com/TechCenter1-855-788-6655

Call or visit us for complete course listings:

Register today for intensive, hands-on training held in our 9,000 sq. ft., state-of-the-art technical training facility in Tampa, FL.

PROCESS MONIT

ORING

SPEC

IAL R

EPORT

EYES ON BOTTLES

Intr

avis

Inc.

The IntraVisualizer dashboard display

Page 3: Contents...Contents Compounding 56 Matching pelletizer to application is key for processors. Injection Molding 59 Machinery, automation and tooling at MD&M West. 61 Arburg debuts new

plasticsmachinerymagazine.com 13

PROCESS MONITORING

SPECIAL REPORT

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ASB North American Focus_6x8vs5.pdf 1 12/1/15 6:42 AM

The company’s PreWatcher III system for inline use provides a 360-degree quality control check on injection molded preforms and is designed to oper-ate inline with the molding unit operating at rates of up to 72,000 preforms per hour. PreWatcher III uses three cameras to monitor the preform thread, three cameras to inspect the body and two cameras that inspect the top sealing surface and gate area. It checks for length and shape deviations, material defects, holes and notches in the gate, color and sealing surface issues.

Intravis updated LabelWatcher 360, Cap-Watcher III and PreWatcher III last year. It also offers IMLWatcher, which inspects for label pres-ence, identity, position and seam, as well as wrin-kles and bubbles. Its BarrierWatcher checks interior layers within a finished product for irregularities using specially designed cameras. In addition, it checks thin walls for holes and examines surfaces. SpotWatcher performs a 360-degree inspection of extrusion and stretch blow molded bottles, checking for flash, color streaks, holes, burn spots, material defects, contamination, ovality and choked necks. A Sample-PreWatcher system inspects batches of pre-forms for weight, contamination and defects. Each Watcher system compares an image to a reference sample using a proprietary algorithm.

All the Watcher cameras are equipped with optical character recognition, which allows the inspection system to read the cavity number during production. “This allows the system user to correlate a product defect back to a specific cavity,” said Mueller.

VERSATILITY ON VIEWAll data collected from any Watcher program

is sent to users’ servers; the IntraVisualizer system can even collate data across multiple plants. Using IntraVisualizer software, users can pull that data to generate graphs, diagrams, tables and statistical reports. This allows users to compare production lines to determine which lines operate most effi-ciently and to discover hidden problems. Produc-tion information from similar lines not previously compared in real-time can be viewed side by side.

“The software can finger point where thereis a quality issue, which line is losing product and the source for the loss of product,” Mueller said. Users can configure the dashboard display to show selected data, which can be grouped as they see fit. Correlating the data to production parametershelps a processor to respond quickly to parameterstrending out of specification, which helps to reduce rejects. The IntraVisualizer software employs a color scheme to indicate the quality of the part.

The Intravis system features a 3-D mold dia-gram function that provides a bar graph showing faults by type and rate. The diagram updates at the end of each cycle. “For maintenance staff, this type of data is extremely valuable. They can view the chart and see that 98 percent of bad

parts produced during a shift were made in a specific cavity,” said Mueller. The processor

does not have to manually evaluate a bad part or conduct a product quality check offline.

Another function provides long-term data analysis of production. The function provides clear

information on the estimated time until failure of the monitored item. This helps to identify slow developing problems. A molder producing an injection molded preform having an outer thread dimension of 28mm might not notice a change in thread dimension to 28.05mm after two hours of production, or see when the dimension changed to 28.07 mm four hours into production. “If the molder were just running an inspection system, they might not catch the deviation in the thread until bad bottles were being produced. The trend-statistics function can accurately measure and show that dimensional requirement over numerous cycles,” said Mueller.

Trend statistics can be used to reveal long developing changes in production that impact thread dimensions, neck dimensions, wall thick-nesses and gate lengths, as well as mold wear and more. Future defects can be avoided with

long-term data analysis. A produc-tion scheduler feature in IntraVisualizer helps maintenance personnel schedule machine downtime, based on trending data, Mueller said.

Intravis is working with partners to upgrade the IntraVisualizer system into a closed-loop program able to automatically make adjustments when production parameters deviate. “Currently, IntraVisualizer provides data that indicate the trends going on in the production environment. Currently, it is up to the processor to take action when they notice a problem arising,” said Mueller.

Mikell Knights, senior [email protected]

Contact: Intravis Inc., 770-662-5458,

www.intravis.com