The Dow Chemical facility in Freeport, Texas, packages more than 100 different liquid chemical products, including glycerine and glycol, in 55-gallon metal and plastic drums. The plant processes both hazardous and nonhazardous chemicals and operates on a drum-to-order basis.
It keeps filled drums in inventory to a minimum to save both money and space. That means it is producing lots of small batches, and because of the nature of its products, accurate labeling is a must.
Prior to the spring of 2001, Dow was using manual methods almost exclusively to fill and label its drums. The facility had six separate filling/packaging lines located around the facility floor, each staffed by two or three employees.
The drums were filled using what project manager Joe Hairston calls the "cotton-scale-and-a-hose" method: Drums were routed via conveyor to an operator who unscrewed the bung, put in the filling lance and filled the drum, put it on a scale, put the bung back in, capped the drum and moved it down the line. After all that, another operator applied preprinted product ID labels by hand. The process was slow and inefficient, and Dow wanted to automate the entire operation.
Hairston was put in charge of the project, but he wanted to proceed with caution. "I'd never put in a drumming machine in my life. If it didn't work, my neck stuck out," he says.
He and his team did their homework ," including visiting manufacturing plants both here and in Europe to see systems in operation ," and in the end decided to get help from Dow's long-time business partner Feige Filling Technologies USA of Houston.
Feige has supplied filling technology to more than 20 other Dow facilities around the world, and the company's track record as an established fabricator of fully automated machines gave the team a sense of security.
"They came highly recommended," says Hairston.
Feige consolidated the six manual lines into two automated lines ," Line A and Line B ,"that operate side by side. Line A handles the nonhazardous chemicals and Line B the hazardous or flammable materials.