
Wilton Industries, Inc.

Systems Integrator: Conveyor Solutions, Inc. (Schaumburg, IL)
Throughput Jumps With New Conveyors
Integrated conveyor system combines with paperless picking and WMS
to help Wilton Industries reach new productivity levels.
Wilton
Industries is a company on a steady growth trajectory. Its four main
business units—the Wilton Enterprises line of baking and cake
decorating products, Rowoco kitchen utensils, the Weston Gallery of
designer photo frames, and Copco fine kitchenware—have all recorded
big volume increases over the past few years.
Inevitably, this kind of growth brings with it some operating
challenges—one of the toughest being how to keep pace with booming
order volume. The company is meeting that challenge at its Wilton
Enterprises unit at Woodridge, Illinois, with a streamlined new Hytrol
conveyor system from Conveyor Solutions, Inc. That system, combined with
a new RF-based paperless picking operation and a sophisticated Warehouse
Management System (WMS), is helping Woodridge achieve record levels of
productivity—with the capacity to achieve even higher levels in the
future.
"Our primary objectives were to increase throughput and
accuracy," says Tom Gibadlo, Wilton's vice president of operations.
"Since the installation was completed in June of last year, we've
made great gains in throughput and now we're beginning to see some
significant improvement in accuracy as well." Gibadlo, Bill Mathews
(Wilton's director of logistics), and their team worked hand-in-hand
with Conveyor Solutions Inc. in designing and installing the new system.
Conveyor Solutions is a systems integrator and distributor of Hytrol
equipment based in Schaumburg, Illinois.
Upgrading and Improving
Prior to installation of the new conveyor system, the Woodridge
facility faced a number of inhibitors to peak productivity. For one
thing, none of the existing conveyor lines in the picking areas were
connected. Orders had to be moved by hand around the facility to the
appropriate pallets and then loaded onto the trucks. This resulted in
throughput levels that were less than optimum. It also meant that
shipping cartons were not being filled to their optimum weight, which
often translated to higher shipping costs.
The new operation addresses these problems. . .and more. An
integrated conveyor system—incorporating belt, gravity, sawtooth
merge, and horizontal accumulating units with the EZ-Logic
feature—expedites the flow of orders throughout the 143,000
square-foot facility. The conveyors connect three picking areas for
less-than-case picks, a separate case pick module, and a mezzanine
picking area for mail orders. All of these lines flow into a
computer-controlled sortation system, which sends the cartons down the
correct shipping lines.
Order
fulfillment is quick and efficient in all of the pick areas. In the
full-case and less-than-case pick modules on the ground floor, an
automated RF system directs the picking activity, replacing the old
paper-based method. The order picker first scans the bar-coded shipping
label on the carton. The RF unit directs the picker to the right bin
location. The picker then scans the bin location to verify location
accuracy before proceeding with the actual order picking.
The workers complete picking in one zone before moving the carton on
gravity conveyors to the next zone. In the less-than-case area, when all
of the picks are completed in one line, the cartons are placed on
powered horizontal conveyors and moved on to the next picking module.
There the process is repeated until the order is complete.
When the orders are completely filled in the ground floor picking
areas, they are placed on a powered conveyor for transport to the tape
packing machines. Packing material is inserted into the cartons and the
case is sealed. The shipping carton then passes over a weigh-in-motion
scale that captures the carton weight for manifesting. Scanners direct
the cartons from the main picking areas and the mezzanine down four
powered takeaway conveyors with the EZ Logic accumulation feature and
through a sawtooth merge to the sortation area.
The
sortation system is a critical element of the Woodridge operation. It
currently processes 18 cases a minute and has the capacity to handle 30.
The sortation system diverts the shipping cartons down to the
appropriate shipping line. Several of these lines, called "fluid
load lines," extend directly into the outbound truck.
The last shipping carton of each order is diverted to a packing list
area. Here the carton is scanned and a packing list of the order is
produced and applied to the carton. With the packing list applied, the
shipping carton is re-inducted into the sorter via a re-circulation
conveyor and diverted down to the proper line. All in all, it's a
streamlined and efficient system.
Counting the Benefits
In
combination with the WMS and paperless picking, the new conveyors began
boosting productivity at Woodridge almost from the very beginning.
Today, throughput is up by more than 20% in the case pick area alone.
Importantly, the design allows for easy expansion of the pick modules
and sortation system if required.
In addition, the average weight of the parcels shipped is up from 13
to 19 pounds thanks to conveyor integration of the picking lines. This
has resulted in lower overall carton volume as well as a significant
reduction in shipping costs.
One other benefit bears mentioning here, too. The installation was
completed without a single shift having to shut down. "I credit
Scott Lee and his people at Conveyor Solutions for making this
happen," says Gibadlo. "They worked closely with us to ensure
that we had no loss of productivity.
The Wilton Center
Completed orders picked in the less-than-case pick lines on the
ground floor move up on belt conveyors to the taping and sealing
stations. Orders in the case pick module are taped and sealed on the
ground floor before moving up. All of these cartons, along with orders
from the mezzanine, pass though the sawtooth merge enroute to the
sortation area. The sortation system diverts the shipping cartons down
to the appropriate shipping line. The new system enables "live
loading" of the trucks for added productivity.
Details on the Installation
Company: Wilton Industries Inc.
Facility: Distribution Center
Location: Woodridge, IL
Size: 143,000 square feet
Employees: 144 (two shifts)
Vice President of Operations: Tom Gibadlo
Product handled: Baking and cake decorating products, party
goods.
Throughput: 8,000 cases/day
Types of conveyors: Horizontal power (EZ Logic and accumulating),
live roller, belt, sawtooth merge, gravity.
Control System: Allen Bradley PLC
Conveyor supplier: Hytrol Conveyor Inc., Jonesboro, AR
Systems Integrator: Conveyor Solutions Inc. (Schaumburg, IL)
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