scholarly journals Development of Technologies for Cooling Strips of Steel 60C2XA on a Retractable Roller Conveyor

2019 ◽  
Vol 14 (16) ◽  
pp. 5840-5846
Author(s):  
Rustem Kozbagarov ◽  
Timur Chigambaev ◽  
Talgat Agimov ◽  
Zhastalap Abilkaiyr ◽  
Batyrkhan Kyrykbaev ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
Metallurgist ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 51 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 41-45 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. V. Denisov ◽  
S. N. Gorshkov ◽  
A. V. Shargunov ◽  
G. N. Posazhennikov ◽  
V. V. Galkin

Author(s):  
M Yani Syafei ◽  
Andi Muhamad Yusuf

PT. FSI is a company engaged in the automotive sector. Increased demand and efforts to meet customer satisfaction, then encouraging companies to continue to make various improvements including the shipping department, which is to facilitate the delivery of products to customers. One of the causes of the delay in the delivery of products to customers (delay delivery) is that there is a problem in the pre-delivery process, namely the storage conveyor machine. A storage conveyor machine is a machine that connects from the results of the production process to the temporary storage of goods which are then put into trucks to be sent to consumers.<br />The objective achieved in this study was to analyze the causes of the delay delivery in the process of shipping car seats on conveyor storage machines and make improvements to reduce the jammed base pallet frequency on the storage conveyor machine using the six sigma method. Based on the results of the research and analysis that have been carried out, it turns out that the case of the jammed base pallet on the conveyor storage machine is the cause of delay delivery to the customer and then make improvement to overcome or reduce the frequency of jammed base pallet problems on the storage conveyor machine by adding sponges to the shaft roller conveyor. The addition of sponge rolls is intended to increase power when moving base pallet between stations.


Author(s):  
Bradford Range

Abstract Passive roller conveyors are frequently used in material handling applications to transport objects of various sizes and shapes. Passive systems cannot control unit flow, leading to queues and system jams. In this paper we analyze the performance of a gravity-driven roller conveyor with brakes selectively installed on rollers to control package flow in the load lanes of a transportation hub. Dynamics of the rollers and kinematic interaction with boxes on the conveyor were derived and fully modeled in MATLAB to simulate accurate conveyor behavior. Sensitivity analyses were performed to evaluate the effect of friction, box mass, roller inertia, and other factors. Using heuristic data to define boundary conditions (box weight, size, and input frequency), several control cases were evaluated. Performance was defined by buffering efficiency of the conveyor, or how effectively the conveyor “kept pace” with a person moving boxes from the load conveyor onto a waiting truck. Several dynamic control cases were simulated. It was found that the optimal number of installed brakes is 30% of the total rollers on the conveyor. Even rudimentary brake control schemes (applying a simple duty-cycle on/off to roller brakes) had the potential to increase the conveyor buffer efficiency by 10% over baseline, with the potential for much greater benefits from more “intelligent” closed-loop control schemes. The simulation and optimization of the active roller conveyor gave insights into the behavior of their truck loading system and identified several ways to increase loading efficiency.


2011 ◽  
Vol 201-203 ◽  
pp. 1517-1520 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hong Sheng Zhao ◽  
Yun Zhen Wu

To solve technical problems of current roller conveyor, such as big volume, complex structure and heavy maintenance workload, a new roller conveyor has been researched by adopting advanced technology of three-phase A.C linear motor. It has no intermediate transmission units that exist in the conventional roller conveyor, and is a new form structure of the conveyor. The device consists mainly of rollers and linear motors. The roller serves as driving and load-bearing mechanism, and as the rotor of linear motor, too. In the process of operation, with rollers served as the carriers, the friction force between rollers and objects transmits the motion consummately to achieve the goal of transportation. This new conveyor can completely replace the current various types of roller conveyor with such features as simple structure, low failure rate and cost.


Metallurgist ◽  
1986 ◽  
Vol 30 (9) ◽  
pp. 334-335
Author(s):  
V. N. Khloponin ◽  
I. M. Khrebtov ◽  
V. S. Savchenko ◽  
S. M. Tikhonov ◽  
V. Ya. Tishkov ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
N Miloradović ◽  
R Vujanac ◽  
I Miletić
Keyword(s):  

2014 ◽  
Vol 77 (11) ◽  
pp. 1868-1875 ◽  
Author(s):  
HAIQIANG WANG ◽  
ELLIOT T. RYSER

Chemical sanitizers are usually added to dump tank water to minimize cross-contamination during tomato packing. However, the efficacy of sanitizers continues to be questioned. This study assessed the ability of six commonly used sanitizers (40 ppm of peroxyacetic acid, 40 ppm of mixed peracid, 40 ppm of available chlorine alone or acidified to pH 6.0 with citric acid or T-128, and electrolyzed water containing 40 ppm of available chlorine at pH 6.7) to reduce Salmonella on tomatoes, in wash water, and on equipment surfaces using a pilot-scale processing line. Red round tomatoes (11.3 kg) were dip inoculated to contain Salmonella at ~ 6 log CFU/g, air dried for 2 h, treated for 2 min in a 3.3-m-long dump tank and then dried on a roller conveyor, with sanitizer-free water serving as the control. Tomato and water samples were collected at 15-s intervals during washing with additional dump tank, water tank, and roller conveyor surface samples collected after washing. All samples were appropriately neutralized, diluted, and surface plated on Trypticase soy agar containing 0.6% yeast extract, 0.05% ferric ammonium citrate, and 0.03% sodium thiosulfate with or without membrane filtration to enumerate Salmonella. All six sanitizer treatments were more efficacious than the water control (P ≤ 0.05), with chlorine plus citric acid yielding the greatest Salmonella reduction on tomatoes (3.1 log CFU/g). After processing, all sanitizer wash solutions contained significantly lower (P ≤ 0.05) levels of Salmonella than the water control (3.0 log CFU/ml). The four chlorine-based sanitizer treatments yielded significantly lower Salmonella populations (P ≤ 0.05) in the wash solution compared with peroxyacetic acid and mixed peracid. After processing with sanitizers, Salmonella populations decreased to nondetectable levels (&lt; 0.2 log CFU/100 cm2) on the equipment surfaces.


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