Close×

Fortress Technology, represented locally by AccuPak, has designed a multi-aperture, multi-lane metal detector range for food manufacturers and packers.

In just one system, the multi-aperture unit can improve total cost of ownership by over 65 per cent, the company says. A single metal detector is mounted across multiple food packing and processing conveyor lines, and the unit is divided into individual apertures.

Since each aperture is smaller, the machine has the ability to detect metal fragments as small as 0.8 mm ferrous, 0.8 mm non-ferrous and 1.2 mm stainless steel, regardless of the number of lanes travelling through the unit. In addition, the smaller aperture copes better with orientation and product effect, according to the company.

Fortress says that consolidating this multi-aperture technology into one unit spanning multiple lanes, compared to individual metal detectors, cuts the equipment footprint by over 50 per cent and optimises floorspace.

The unit also reportedly increases operational efficiencies, reducing initial capital investment costs for food processors and packers by up to 40 per cent when compared to the purchase of individual metal detectors for each line.

Meat burgers, chilled salads and bakeries are among the applications suited to the technology.

Packaging News

Under pressure from shareholders to cut costs, Unilever has released a revised sustainability strategy that CEO Hein Schumacher describes as “unashamedly realistic”, while critics call it shameful.

Warwick Armstrong is the new managing director IPE Pack Oceania, joining the company with a wealth of experience in the Australian packaging industry, and deep knowledge of equipment and materials.

The ACCC has instituted court proceedings against Clorox Australia, owner of GLAD-branded kitchen and garbage bags, over alleged false claims that bags were partly made of recycled 'ocean plastic'.