With the requirement of ongoing production during installation
in their minds, Kimberly-Clark’s Project Management planned the
project very carefully. FlexLink was asked to carry out the
installation and commissioning during three separate phases in
order to adjust to deliveries of other equipment,. Due to the
flexibility of the FlexLink equipment, production level was
maintained during the entire installation. Today the production
lines are running 24 hours, seven days a week. After the main
project was completed some fine-tunings, additions and further line
extensions have been made in order to meet new production
needs. FlexLink’s Project Manager, Hans Östergren, “We made our
time schedule in close co-operation. The key thing was to utilize
enough resources early in the project, enabling us to run several
parallel activities, both for engineering and
installation.”
To secure the functionality of the more advanced DFC equipment,
acceptance tests were carried out in FlexLink’s workshop according
to schedule. At the same time, the site installation of the
conveyor infrastructure was running at full speed and preparations
for the pre-tested equipment were made.
Björn Gustafsson, one of FlexLink’s responsible technicians at
site: “We had a good flow during the installation, with only a few
delivery problems. The first-class installation drawings from our
engineers were useful, and we kept the time-schedule as promised. I
would also like to mention the excellent co-operation with
Kimberly-Clark’s project team as a success factor.” “Successful projects reflect the attitude of the people
involved”
All people with project experience know that attaining the right
attitude requires upgrading and changes in a project of this size,
says Tony Lloyd, Kimberly-Clark’s Project Manager. I think that
FlexLink has shown the right attitude. Problems need to be solved
together, and actions taken quickly. Moreover, it is easy to forget
that everything went more smoothly than we expected, for instance
the commissioning and start up, which was done ahead of
schedule.” Based on the wide range of FlexLink standard
assortment
The conveyor equipment was based on the wide range of FlexLink
standard assortment, engineered to cope with the environment in a
tissue converting industry. Valuable floor space was made available
by running some of the conveyors above head height, also enabling
good access to the machines.
In-line elevation of the products was done by incline/wedge
elevators and then chutes bring down products to the in-feed height
of the packaging equipment.
In this project FlexLink uses the patented Dynamic Flow Concept for
diverting and merging single rolls and packs of rolls in order to
meet Kimberly-Clark’s requirements for flexible production, keeping
the packaging machinery as busy as possible.
The diverters have the possibility to cope with today’s high
production rates and be very space efficient at the same time. The
machinery has small dimensions itself, and it minimizes lengths of
conveyors with no needs of product backlog. The DFC diverters keep control of the products on an
individual basis
FlexLink’s DFC diverters keep control of the products on an
individual basis. This enables it to be put ‘anywhere’ in between
production- and packaging-machinery, both for single products and
packs of products. This makes it possible to keep the amount
of non-value adding conveyors as low as possible.
Telescopic conveyors and pivoting belt-conveyors, enabling products
to reach different lanes into machines, were also used to get the
flexibility. Reject units taking care of faulty products and gating
conveyors are examples of other equipment used to secure quality
and access to the machinery.
Björn Hamsten finds something to add: “The tissue converting
industry has had, and in some cases still have, quality problems on
products and packs due to the distribution system. Minimizing
product damages has always been an important task for me and I am
pretty sure that it has been solved in this production
facility.” FlexLink’s standard operator interface is in use for the
control system
It is possible to control and manage the whole system from
different cabinets and FlexLink’s standard operator interface is in
use. On the password protected touch screens you can follow and set
the production requirements. It is easy to search the system and
get actual status on the equipment, e.g. on individual motors
showing energy consumption, speed, etc.
The conveyors are only running when needed and speeds are kept to a
minimum in order to reduce power consumption, among other things.
The pull of products from the machines down stream sets the
requirements and the distribution system builds the needed
intermediate bridges. The control system for the equipment
communicates with the system in which the production is set,
measured and followed up.
Two-wire communication and an ingenious layout of the power
distribution were made for basically two important
reasons. Hans Östergren, explains: “First of all it reduces
installation time and the amount of cables necessary. Secondly with
future expansion in mind, its flexibility and ease of change and
additions meets the requirements of the tissue industy very well.
It is all to easy to look on an investment with a shortterm mind in
order to keep down project costs.”
Hans Östergren: ”I am very proud of the system we delivered to
Kimberly-Clark. It is an impressive operation they have there. It
was an honour to be involved in the project and I have learnt a
lot.” |