Title: Materials Handling
1Materials Handling
- Marketing Logistics
- There is no audio on this presentation.
2Unit Loads
- Unit load formation equipment is used to restrict
materials so that they maintain their integrity
when handled a single load during transport and
for storage. - Source College Industry Council on Material
Handling Education website
3Types of Unit Load Equipment
- Self-restraining (no equipment).
- Pallets.
- Skids.
- Slipsheets.
- Tote pans.
- Pallet boxes/skid boxes.
- Bins, baskets, racks.
- Cartons.
- Bags.
- Bulk load containers.
- Crates.
- Intermodal containers.
- Strapping tape/glue.
- Shrink-wrap/stretch wrap.
- Palletizers.
- Source College Industry Council on Material
Handling Education website
4Unit Loads
- Advantages
- More items can be handled at the same time,
reducing number of trips and, potentially,
handling costs, loading, unloading times, product
damage. - Enables the use of standardized material handling
equipment.
- Disadvantages
- Time spent forming and breaking down the unit
load. - Cost of containers/pallets and other load
restraining materials used in the unit load - Empty containers/pallets may need to be returned
to their point of origin. - Source College Industry Council on Material
Handling Education website
5Pallets
- Platform with enough clearance beneath its top
surface (or face) to enable the insertion of
forks for subsequent
lifting purposes - Materials Wood (most common), paper, plastic,
rubber, and metal. - Source College Industry Council on Material
Handling Education website -
6Skids
- Platform (typically metal) with enough clearance
to enable a platform truck to move underneath for
lifting. - Forks can also be used to handle skids since the
clearance of a skid is greater than that of a
pallet - Compared to a pallet, a skid is usually used for
heavier loads and when stacking is not required.
- Source College Industry Council on Material
Handling Education website
7Slipsheets
- Thick piece of paper, corrugated fiber, or
plastic upon which a load is placed. - Tabs on the sheet are grabbed by a special
push/pull lift truck attachment. - Source College Industry Council on Material
Handling Education website
8Tote Pans
- Reusable container used to unitize and protect
loose discrete items - Typically used for in-process handling
- Returnable totes provide alternative to cartons
for distribution
Source College Industry Council on Material
Handling Education website
9Pallet Boxes/Skid Boxes
Reusable container used to unitize and protect
loose items for fork/platform truck handling
Source College Industry Council on Material
Handling Education website
10Cartons
- Disposable container used to unitize and protect
loose discrete items - Typically used for distribution.
- Dimensions always specified as sequence Length x
Width x Depth, where length is the larger, and
width is the smaller, of the two dimension of the
open face of the carton, and depth is the
distance perpendicular to the length and
width
Source College Industry Council on Material
Handling Education website
11Bags
- Disposable container used to unitize and protect
bulk materials. - Typically used for distribution.
- Polymerized plastic ("poly") bags available from
light weight (1 mil.) to heavy weight (6 mil.) in
flat and gusseted styles. - Dimensions of bag specified as Width x Length,
for flat bags, and Width x Depth (half gusset) x
Length, for gusseted bags.
Source College Industry Council on Material
Handling Education website
12Bulk Load Containers
- Reusable container used to unitize and protect
bulk materials. - Includes drums, cylinders, etc.
- Used for both distribution and in-process
handling.
Source College Industry Council on Material
Handling Education website
13Crates
- Disposable container used to protect discrete
items. - Typically used for distribution.
Source College Industry Council on Material
Handling Education website
14Intermodal Container
- Reusable container used to unitize and protect
loose discrete items. - Enables a load to be handled as a single unit
when it is transferred between road, rail, and
sea modes of transport. - It is not as common to use intermodal containers
for airfreight transport because of aircraft
shape and weight restrictions. - The
standard outside dimensions of intermodal
containers are 20 or 40 ft. in length 8 ft. in
width and 8, 8.5, - or 9.5
ft. in height less 8 in. of length, 5 in. of
width, and 9.5 in. of height to determine the
inside dimensions. -
Typical sea transport costs per 40-ft container
are 30004000 from Japan to the US west coast, -
40005000 from Singapore to the US west coast,
and 25003500 from Europe to the US east coast -
transport costs for a 20-ft. container is 70 of
the costs of a 40-ft. container 15
Source College Industry Council on Material
Handling Education website
15Strapping/Tape/Glue
- Used for load stabilization.
- Straps are either steel or plastic.
- Plastic strapping that shrinks is used to keep
loads from becoming loose during shipment.
Source College Industry Council on Material
Handling Education website
16Shrink Wrap/Stretch Wrap
- Allows irregular loads to be stabilized.
- In shrink-wrapping, a film or bag is placed over
the load and then heat is applied to shrink the
film or bag. - Most shrink-wrapping being replaced by
stretch-wrapping,
where a film is wound around the load while the
film is stretched.
Source College Industry Council on Material
Handling Education website
17Palletizers
- Manual palletizing.
- Robotic pick-and-place palletizers.
- Conventional stripper-plate palletizers.
18Manual palletizing
- Operators arrange items into the desired pattern
used to form the unit load - Semi-mechanized palletizers use operators to
arrange items into the desired pattern for each
layer of the unit load
and a powered device is used to
transfer layers onto a pallet and then lower the
load for the next layer.
Source College Industry Council on Material
Handling Education website
19Robotic pick-and-place palletizers
- Fully automated device to build unit loads.
- Used when flexibility is required.
- Greatest limitation is capacity.
Source College Industry Council on Material
Handling Education website
20Conventional stripper-plate palletizers In-Line
- Fully automated device to build unit loads.
- Used when high throughput of identical loads is
required.
Problem") - Capacity is typically greater (30180 items per
minute) than pick and place, but not as flexible.
- Source College Industry
Council on Material Handling Education website
21Conventional stripper-plate palletizers Right
Angle
- Right angle" pattern formation picture)very
flexible patterns are possible can handle a wide
variety of case sizes and types limited capacity
(up to 80 items per minute) compact design.
Source College Industry Council on Material
Handling Education website