How To Fill Lined Bulk Bags

Posted by Don Mackrill on Thu, Apr, 19, 2012 @ 13:04 PM

Read on to learn how to fill lined bulk bags.

Typically, bulk bag liners are made from polyethylene film and are, in effect, ‘inner bags’ that are placed within a bulk bag or FIBC.  The product contacts the liner not the bulk bag.Form fit bulk bag liner

There are generally two types of liners: loose and form fit.

  1. Loose liners: a cylinder of PE film that is stuffed into the bag.  Loose liners are occasionally glued to the bulk bag.
  2. Form fit liners: a PE film ‘container’ that looks just like a bulk bag (four sides, top and bottom, inlet and outlet spouts) that is placed within the bulk bag.  Often, form fit liners are attached to the bulk bag by various methods including tabs that are sewn into the top (and sometimes bottom) seams of the bag.

Filling Bulk Bags with Loose Liners

The most critical factor in filling a bulk bag with a loose liner is to ensure that the liner has expanded and ‘taken’ the cubic shape of the bulk bag before it is filled.  Otherwise, there is a high probability that the unexpanded loose liner will have folds in it that the product will fillLoose bulk bag liner over thereby making it extremely difficult (if not impossible) to discharge.

Blowing air into the liner, generally referred to as inflation, is the quickest and easiest method to expand a loose liner.  A fan blower can be used or a device called an eductor connected to a source of compressed air that draws in ambient air are the two most common inflation methods.

The other consideration when filling loose liners is to allow the inlet of the liner to slide down as the bag is being filled while still maintaining a secure grip.  If the liner inlet is held so that it cannot move it is highly likely the top corners of the bag will not be filled because the liner will form a peak extending from the fill head where it is clamped to somewhere down the sides of the bag.  In this case it would be impossible to fill the bag to target weight unless the bag is significantly oversized.

Filling Bulk Bags With Form Fit Liners

If your bulk bag filler is designed so that the bulk bag rests on a pallet or other flat surface throughout the filling cycle even bags with form fit liners that are attached to the outer bulk bag should be inflated.  Otherwise, as with loose liners, the bag may be folded or creased in such a way that the product will fill over the folds or creases thereby impeding discharge and the ability to completely fill the bulk bag.

However, if your bulk bag filler features ‘hang filling’ where the bulk bag spends part of the filling cycle hanging suspended from its loops, inflating form fit liners is unnecessary.

Topics: big bags, bulk bag liner, form fit liner, bulk bag, loose liner

Sugar in Big Bags Not Small Bags: Excellent ROI

Posted by Don Mackrill on Fri, Nov, 04, 2011 @ 10:11 AM

A major Caribbean beverage producer - juices, soft drinks, etc. - wanted to improve productivity related to sugar handling.

Their current process involved manually breaking 50 Kg bags at multiple locations. Not only was this labor intensive, but it was soon to be a bottleneck that would impede planned increases in production output.

Working with their primary sugar supplier, one of the largest sugar brokers in the region, and Control and Metering, the beverage company created a plan to achieve their productivity goals and increase the scale of their sugar handling to meet higher production rates by changing incoming sugar packaging to big bags and designing a new sugar batching system.

Big Bags versus Small Bags

Handling sugar required six operators continuously breaking and dumping 50 Kg bags at three locations.

Plus, the 50 Kg bags had to be unloaded from shipping containers one bag at a time and placed in storage manually. This also required multiple operators.

Converting to big bags would allow container unloading to be performed by one operator with a forklift.

Instead of six operators breaking bags at three locations, current production and planned growth for the next two years could be managed by one operator and two automated big bag batching stations.

Batching Sugar from Big Bags

The big bag sugar batching systems were designed to precisely convey sugar to syrup mixing tanks to produce standard brix syrup that would be pumped to all of the beverage production lines in the plant.

Each big bag batching system included a Control and Metering F60 monorail big bagControl and Metering Flo 60 bulk bag discharger discharger, an incline screw conveyor and an automated batch weighing control system.

Big bags would be moved to the production area and the single sugar batching operator would move individual big bags to each of the two big bag batching stations using a pallet truck. The big bag would then we rigged to a lifting frame and placed into the F60 big bag discharger using an integral hoist and trolley.

Screw conveyorThe operator would then safely open the big bag outlet spout within the F60 hopper to initiate sugar flow and, by pressing a single button on the control panel, start the batch.

The automated batch weighing system would thenControl panel control the conveying of sugar from the big bag to the syrup mixing tank according to the syrup recipe.

Economic Benefit of Converting from Small Bags to Big Bags

The fully benefited labor rate at this location is $2.72 USD per hour. Even at this relatively low rate (compared to North America and elsewhere), first year labor savings were calculated to be $152,000 USD with second year savings of $196,000 USD based on increased production.

This resulted in a simple payback for the project of only 21 months. Clearly, the ROI on this project was very attractive!

 

For more information contact Don@ControlandMetering.com.

Topics: big bags, bulk bags, bulk bag unloading, bulk bag batching system, sugar, 50 Kg bags