Archive for the 'Plastic Totes' Category

Bulk Containers - A Greener Option Than Cardboard Boxes

Friday, September 5th, 2008

Not only are cardboard boxes more expensive than used bulk container, but they contribute to landfil waste.
Click here to read more about this benefits of bulk containers along with other reusable packaging products.

Cardboard Boxes More Expensive than Used Bulk Containers

According to David Madden, President of Container Exchanger, “We have facilitated many hundreds of transactions to date and our client list includes Fortune 500 businesses, Automotive Tier 1 manufacturers, consumer product manufacturers, scrap steel businesses, and distribution and freight companies. We work with and empower independent used equipment dealers, used equipment liquidators, and end users by providing value added sales assistance. We handle all customer questions, follow-up sales calls, payment processing, freight delivery, and after-sales support to our customers, and our method of doing business puts buyers and sellers at ease by controlling monetary flow in a manner that ensures full disclosure and delivery of quality product.”

Container Exchanger is an online marketplace that offers manufacturing and distribution businesses an outlet for procuring or selling used returnable packaging. The product offerings include many standard and common reusable packaging solutions, including but not limited to plastic totes, plastic collapsible bulk boxes, metal containers, wire baskets, and plastic pallets. Launched in 2005, ContainerExchanger.com has empowered companies to reduce packaging acquisition costs through access to used returnable packaging inventories and it has enabled companies to maximize return during disposal of their used packaging fleets.

Returnable packaging reduces waste created by every business. The EarthWorks Group estimates that 30% of landfill waste is created by plastic and paper packaging. The use of cardboard products and other one-time-use packaging products contribute to this waste.
Folding bulk containers, industrial totes, and metal storage bins are used over and over again within a facility or between a supplier and a customer. They can be used literally thousands of times. These bulk boxes are much cheaper in the long term when compared to buying cardboard boxes and wood crates every time that product is shipped. Savings can be observed in the per piece packaging cost. While the upfront investment in returnable packaging may cost more, savings can be realized quickly through repeated use (the same bulk containers, metal bins, and totes are used over and over), labor (no more box assembly), material handling (fewer moves from stackable containers), quality (fewer rejects due to damaged packaging), and floor space (plastic and metal containers can stack very high). The per piece packaging costs for used bulk containers and totes can be as low as 5% of the costs for a comparable expendable solution, depending on shipping volumes.
Container Exchanger (www.containerexchanger.com) is dedicated to the sale and resale of reusable packaging and containers. The firm resells folding bulk containers, metal storage bins, plastic industrial totes, plastic pallets, and used gaylord boxes nationwide. When a company is finished using a returnable packaging fleet, Container Exchanger represents the seller and finds a buyer for the used bulk packaging. Sellers enjoy a high sales price for a better return on investment. Buyers save significantly in comparison to new packaging prices.

Container Exchanger
www.containerexchanger.com
David Madden, President
pr@containerexchanger.com
404-551-5599

Returnable Packaging Improves Material Handling

Thursday, August 28th, 2008

The president of Container Exchanger believes that returnable packaging helps improve material handling by reducing the number of moves from stackable containers. Click here to read more about the specifics of this.

Container Exchanger Lowers Material Handling Costs with Fewer Moves from Stackable Containers
David Madden, President of Container Exchanger, recently reported that, returnable packaging improves material handling by reducing the number of moves from stackable containers. This type of lean manufacturing and distribution metric is quantifiable and makes this environmentally sound decision a good business choice as well.

Container Exchanger is an online marketplace that offers manufacturing and distribution businesses an outlet for procuring or selling used returnable packaging. The product offerings include many standard and common reusable packaging solutions, including but not limited to plastic totes, plastic collapsible bulk boxes, metal containers, wire baskets, and plastic pallets. Launched in 2005, ContainerExchanger.com has empowered companies to reduce packaging acquisition costs through access to used returnable packaging inventories and it has enabled companies to maximize return during disposal of their used packaging fleets.

Returnable packaging reduces waste created by every business. The EarthWorks Group estimates that 30% of landfill waste is created by plastic and paper packaging. The use of cardboard products and other one-time-use packaging products contribute to this waste. The per piece packaging costs for used bulk containers and totes can be as low as 5% of the costs for a comparable expendable solution, depending on shipping volumes. 

Folding bulk containers, industrial totes, and metal storage bins are used over and over again within a facility or between a supplier and a customer. They can be used literally thousands of times. These bulk boxes are much cheaper in the long term when compared to buying cardboard boxes and wood crates every time that product is shipped. Savings can be observed in the per piece packaging cost. While the upfront investment in returnable packaging may cost more, savings can be realized quickly through repeated use (the same bulk containers, metal bins, and totes are used over and over), labor (no more box assembly), material handling (fewer moves from stackable containers), quality (fewer rejects due to damaged packaging), and floor space (plastic and metal containers can stack very high).
Container Exchanger (www.containerexchanger.com) is dedicated to the sale and resale of reusable packaging and containers. The firm resells folding bulk containers, metal storage bins, plastic industrial totes, plastic pallets, and used gaylord boxes nationwide. When a company is finished using a returnable packaging fleet, Container Exchanger represents the seller and finds a buyer for the used bulk packaging. Sellers enjoy a high sales price for a better return on investment. Buyers save significantly in comparison to new packaging prices.

 

Container Exchanger Offers Reusable Containers & Packaging

Wednesday, August 20th, 2008

Container Exchanger offers plastic pallets, folding bulk containers, and plastic totes to name just a few of the items they have available.  Click here to read more.
Used Bulk Containers More Affordable than Cardboard Boxes

(OPENPRESS) July 22, 2008 — Container Exchanger is an online marketplace that offers manufacturing and distribution businesses an outlet for procuring or selling used returnable packaging. The product offerings include many standard and common reusable packaging solutions, including but not limited to plastic totes, plastic collapsible bulk boxes, metal containers, wire baskets, and plastic pallets. Launched in 2005, ContainerExchanger.com has empowered companies to reduce packaging acquisition costs through access to used returnable packaging inventories and it has enabled companies to maximize return during disposal of their used packaging fleets.

According to David Madden, President of Container Exchanger, “We have facilitated many hundreds of transactions to date and our client list includes Fortune 500 businesses, Automotive Tier 1 manufacturers, consumer product manufacturers, scrap steel businesses, and distribution and freight companies. We work with and empower independent used equipment dealers, used equipment liquidators, and end users by providing value added sales assistance. We handle all customer questions, follow-up sales calls, payment processing, freight delivery, and after-sales support to our customers, and our method of doing business puts buyers and sellers at ease by controlling monetary flow in a manner that ensures full disclosure and delivery of quality product.”

Returnable packaging reduces waste created by every business. The EarthWorks Group estimates that 30% of landfill waste is created by plastic and paper packaging. The use of cardboard products and other one-time-use packaging products contribute to this waste.
Folding bulk containers, industrial totes, and metal storage bins are used over and over again within a facility or between a supplier and a customer. They can be used literally thousands of times. These bulk boxes are much cheaper in the long term when compared to buying cardboard boxes and wood crates every time that product is shipped. Savings can be observed in the per piece packaging cost. While the upfront investment in returnable packaging may cost more, savings can be realized quickly through repeated use (the same bulk containers, metal bins, and totes are used over and over), labor (no more box assembly), material handling (fewer moves from stackable containers), quality (fewer rejects due to damaged packaging), and floor space (plastic and metal containers can stack very high). The per piece packaging costs for used bulk containers and totes can be as low as 5% of the costs for a comparable expendable solution, depending on shipping volumes.

Container Exchanger (www.containerexchanger.com) is dedicated to the sale and resale of reusable packaging and containers. The firm resells folding bulk containers, metal storage bins, plastic industrial totes, plastic pallets, and used gaylord boxes nationwide. When a company is finished using a returnable packaging fleet, Container Exchanger represents the seller and finds a buyer for the used bulk packaging. Sellers enjoy a high sales price for a better return on investment. Buyers save significantly in comparison to new packaging prices.

Container Exchanger
www.containerexchanger.com
David Madden, President
pr@containerexchanger.com
404-551-5599

Superior Pallet Focuses On Recycling

Tuesday, July 29th, 2008

Superior pallet makes remanufactured pallets with recycled lumber and also makes “combo” pallets.  Click here to read more.

Father, Son Growing Superior Pallets in Western New York: Rotochopper Machine Proves Valuable to Grind Residuals, Color Mulch

By Diane M. Calabrese
Date Posted: 7/1/2008

BUFFALO, New York — Second chances often get labeled the stuff of dreams, but hard work and conviction can make them happen. Someone just has to roll up his sleeves and get going.

David Goettel did that when he purchased the assets of a troubled pallet company in western New York and built his own, successful business.

Dave is the president and CEO of Superior Pallets Inc., which dates to 2000. His son, Jeff, vice president, joined the company full-time in 2001.

The name Superior Pallets was selected to put the focus on the company’s philosophy of melding superior products to superior service, said Jeff. Superior processed 800,000 pallets in 2007. Most were repaired or dismantled to reclaim used lumber for repair stock or to make remanufactured or combination pallets. Scrap pallets were processed by grinding.

Superior Pallets repairs pallets, makes remanufactured pallets with recycled lumber and also makes combination or ‘combo’ pallets with some recycled lumber and some new lumber. For new lumber the company buys pre-cut stock. Although pallet repair and recycling is the company’s dominant focus, about 10% of the company’s pallet production is new pallets. The company’s operations employ about 40 workers.

Superior Pallets serves various manufacturing businesses in western New York and northwest Pennsylvania. The company is located in Buffalo, a city of about 300,000 people. The business occupies 14 acres near Interstate 90. Drivers for the company log an average of 325 miles and five stops each day.

The company’s operations, including dismantling pallets for recycled lumber and retrieving surplus pallets for customers, generate a considerable volume of scrap wood material and pallets.  In the spring and summer, the company grinds the material to produce mulch; starting in mid-September, the grindings are sold to markets for boiler fuel.

“In 2007, we ground 7,000 tons of wood waste,” said Jeff. The machine that got the job done is a Rotochopper MC-266 mobile wood grinder. Superior Pallets purchased the Rotochopper in the fall of 2006 after a fire destroyed its existing grinder. Rotochopper is headquartered in St. Martin, Minn.

“We were really interested in the Rotochopper because it could color and grind,” said Jeffrey. Rotochopper machines grind wood material and color the resulting mulch in one pass through the machine.

About half of the mulch made by Superior Pallets is colored — red, black or brown. All mulch is sold bulk wholesale to local governments, landscapers and other markets. The company also produces a wood mulch that meets the American Society for Testing and Materials standard for playground surface material.

Superior Pallets buys Mulch Magic colorants from Colorbiotics. The dyes in Colorbiotics products are derived from plants, so the resulting colored mulch is environmentally friendly. Colorbiotics is an independent business unit of Becker Underwood.

The MC-266 Rotochopper is an “excellent” machine, said Jeff. The company normally uses it to produce about 30 tons of mulch per day. It has the capacity to do much more, but for now, Superior matches grinding operations with the volume of scrap wood it produces. “We’re meeting our needs,” said Jeff. Expanding may be in the future, but for now Jeff wants to use the machine only to handle in-house wood waste.

Because the Rotochopper replaced another grinder that was quite old, Jeff expected good performance because the machine was new. He got it and more, starting with dependability.

“The reliability is great,” said Jeff. “The run time has just been amazing.” He has been especially pleased with the Rotochopper’s ability to produce colored mulch in one pass through the machine. Changing screens is quick and easy, too, he said. “One guy can change the screens in about 20 minutes,” said Jeff.

All that efficiency, and the Rotochopper stands up to heavy-duty grinding and steady hours. “We’ve had very few problems with the machine,” said Jeff. “Rotochopper has a service representative in Pennsylvania who stops in periodically” just to check on the machine, said Jeff. That service means a great deal because it demonstrates commitment to the customer, he added.

Commitment to customer is a business approach with which Jeff and his father can identify. “We’re always looking to improve our business,” said Jeffrey, including improving processes and efficiency. Commitment to customers includes listening to them and interacting with them, which is enhanced with Customer Relationship Management (CRM) software and a Quality Assurance Guide that Superior Pallets shares with its clients on request.

Superior Pallets has a 45,000-square-foot building that is a combination plant and warehouse. The end of May marked the beginning of some significant changes in the company’s pallet repair operations. Superior Pallets installed a Pallet Repair Systems (PRS) ‘nail-on-the-fly’ automated pallet repair line. In addition, the company added an Innovative Data Systems Pallet Track system that uses bar codes and other technology to capture and manage information about its pallet recycling operations. When Jeff talked to Pallet Enterprise in late May for this article, employees were still being trained on the new systems.

The PRS automated repair line replaced a semi-automated system of some significance. The old repair line was part of the business purchased by David, and it was the first pallet repair line designed by Clarence Leising, according to Jeff. Clarence, a sales rep for Eagle Metal Products, has a long history in pallet recycling management and is the author of Pallet Head, a hands-on management guide to pallet recycling.

The new PRS automated pallet repair line will be used exclusively to process GMA pallets. Other pallets are repaired at individual work stations.

If Superior Pallets gets a big order for new pallets of a particular size, it often contracts with other pallet companies that are equipped with automated nailing machines.

Superior Pallets can provide export pallets, too. Heat-treating is subcontracted to Integrated Thermal Solutions in Hamburg, N.Y. “They provide us with proper documentation,” said Jeff.

Approximately 97% of incoming pallet cores come from customers with regular contracts. Superior relies on a fleet of four tractors and 90 trailers to retrieve surplus pallets. Like other pallet recyclers, the company leaves empty trailers at customer locations, returning later to retrieve them when they are filled with pallets and to drop off another empty.

“A few customers will drop off here,” said Jeff, but most rely on Superior’s trailers and service.

Pallets are sorted before they are staged to the repair line. By sorting in advance, the repair line only gets the GMA pallets, and it only gets pallets that can be repaired or are potentially ‘ready-to-go.’ “Everything that comes in, we sort out to useable or unusable,” said Jeffrey.

In its lumber recycling operations, three Smart Products two-man bandsaw dismantlers are used to disassemble pallets. Used pallet parts are cut to length on PRS trim saws.

Safety is a top priority at Superior Pallets. New hires complete a safety training program – dubbed ‘Safely Superior’ — that was developed in-house. Emphasis on safety is reinforced with a daily practice; each employee reviews a safety topic before the start of a shift. Topics are the choice of the employee and may include machine guarding, proper lifting techniques or others. Also, supervisors conduct monthly safety meetings on topics mandated by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA). On-site training and retraining of employees is augmented by a subscription the company has to KellerOnline, which provides easy access to trends and ideas in safety and OSHA updates.

The company has supplied a wide range of pallet sizes over the years. “The largest we’ve built is 180 inches long by 30 inches wide and the smallest is 19 inches by 24 inches,” said Jeff. Besides recycling pallets and making new, remanufactured and ‘combo’ pallets, Superior Pallets supplies plastic pallets, totes and dunnage.

A local company, VRI Sharpening Service in West Seneca, N.Y., services circular saw blades for Superior Pallets. “We buy our bandsaw blades from Sadowski’s,” said Jeff.

Jeff and his father are natives of Buffalo. Dave worked for Ryder Transportation for 22 years. In 1998 he went to work for the pallet business he eventually bought. He served as operations manager of the company. When the parent business began to sell off holdings, Dave decided to buy the pallet division and go into business for himself.

Jeffrey had experience working part-time for the former company. And he worked part-time for Superior Pallets, too, before joining the company full-time in 2001. He worked at the companies part-time while attending the University of Buffalo, where he earned a pre-law degree.

Jeff took a lot of business courses as part of his studies, and he had second thoughts about continuing for a law degree, especially when his father suggested joining the business. “After I graduated, he asked whether I would be interested,” Jeff recalled.

During his stint at the predecessor business, Jeffrey had come to enjoy the mill environment. He worked on a cut-up line that ran a Cornell gang saw and also assembled new pallets.

“I like working with my father,” said Jeff. “We get along very well. He knows the operations side, how to repair equipment.” Jeff and his father more or less split their duties, with Jeff handling financial and administrative tasks and Dave overseeing plant and logistical operations.

The Rotochopper MC-266 is powered by diesel engine. Scrap pallets are loaded into the grinder via forklift. The machine can grind whole scrap pallets, slabs, scrap used lumber, and other wood material. The MC-266 has an infeed opening 66 inches wide and 18 inches high. The machine is road legal when pulled by a tractor.

The MC-266 Rotochopper can grind enough scrap pallets — and color the mulch — to fill a 100-cubic-yard truck in about 40 minutes, according to the manufacturer. It is even faster grinding and coloring bark, producing 100 cubic yards in about 15 minutes.

“Rotochopper has been great for us,” said Jeff. “We’ve recommended it to three or four other companies. They’ve come to see it run. The folks at Rotochopper are absolutely wonderful. They’re phenomenal.”

Jeff and his father also share some leisure interests. “Both my father and I like traveling to Walt Disney World and golfing,” he said.

Mixers Available for Intermediate Bulk Containers

Friday, July 18th, 2008

These mixers were designed to attach to IBC’s or totes.  Read more about this here.

Mixers are designed for mounting to IBCs or totes.

June 20, 2008 - Available with TEFC electric motors (1/3 to 1 hp) or air motors (½ to 1 hp) as well as explosion-proof motors, Series HGL (430 rpm) mixers allow integration with IBCs or poly tote bins by use of optional 2 in. 316SS bulkhead fitting. They feature short shaft and folding propeller that are constructed of 316SS and capable of fitting through 2 in. opening. Prop’s operating diameter is 9 in. Second folding propeller can be added as accessory and bolted anywhere on ¾ in. dia shaft.

Medford, MA Hopes To Increase Recycling In The Business Community

Thursday, July 10th, 2008

One possible option that is being discussed to get the business community started in the recycling program is to offer
“toters,” or large plastic bins, to the businesses.  Read more about other options being discussed here.

Recycling coming soon to a business near you
By Rob Barry/rbarry@cnc.com
Tue Jun 10, 2008, 04:42 PM EDT
Medford -
While most residents are used to the idea of recycling, the business community is far behind — through not fault of its own. But that’s about to change.

A public hearing was held last Wednesday by the Trash and Recycling Commission to discuss possible changes in the way the city approaches commercial trash and recycling pickup.

 “Most of the audience seemed to be from Medford Square,” said commission Chairman Tom Lincoln, of the June 4 meeting. “Many put this in the context of revitalization. With good recycling and good trash management, it helps spiff things up.”

As there is no commercial recycling program in Medford, businesses must physically bring their recyclables to the Department of Public Works yard to keep the green spirit. Many don’t.

The Medford Chamber of Commerce is behind the effort to bring commercial recycling to the city. Dr. Reza Pourshadi, the chamber’s representative on the commission, said it is a matter of interest to many businesses.

“I get a sense that the business community is very much for it,” said Pourshadi. “I think the businesses will be positively impacted because right now businesses do not participate in recycling at all.”

The commission’s recommendation will most likely be that recycling is free. What could change is the method through which pickup occurs. At present, different areas of the city have trash pickup with varying degrees of frequency.

“One idea is to give everybody twice a week pickup,” said Lincoln, “and within that, once a week would be for recycling.”

Another possible option being discussed is to issue “toters,” or large plastic bins, to businesses — one for trash and one for recyclables. This could help prevent those unsightly piles of trash in the business areas that regularly announce trash day to pedestrians.

“One of the big themes of the evening was preventing the trash from blowing around,” said Lincoln. “One of the potential advantages of the toters were that things are kept nice and neat.”

Paying for the additional efforts is another matter of concern. No recommendation is set at the moment, but there are a number of possibilities. There could be a “pay as you throw” program instituted that would create a fee for trash disposal. This fee could be based on weight, bags, or the number of toters issued.

A fee on trash disposal, of course, would be meant to place an incentive on recycling.

“There’s going to be some give and take,” said Pourshadi. “Medford is one of the only cities that does not charge for trash or recycling pickup.”

Pourshadi said the commission has looked into how a number of other cities and towns approach trash and recycling collection. Pourshadi said Boston has a 40 percent recycling rate, Stoneham is at 35 percent and Arlington is around 30 percent. Medford, on the other hand, only has an 11.3 percent recycling rate.

Cheryl White, the chamber’s executive director, said bringing business recycling to the city is a good idea. But she is uncertain how suddenly being charged for trash pickup will sit with business owners.

“I think business recycling is going to be evident,” said White. “Naturally, the chamber is concerned that we don’t want to see our businesses begin to be charged for trash pickup now when the economy is so poor and many of our businesses are struggling to hang on.”

The commission is expected to have its recommendations for both the commercial and residential sides by early next month.

“I just hope that everybody gets on board and realizes the importance of recycling in our society,” said Pourshadi. “This is something we have not dealt with for a long time in Medford. When you look at the cities and towns around us, we are far behind.”

Largest Sock Manufacturer In Europe Uses Plastic Totes

Monday, June 23rd, 2008

GEL-AL, the largest sock manufacturer in Europe, process over twenty thousand plastic totes filled with socks on a daily basis.  Read more about this here.  Largest Sock Manufacturer in Europe Tracks Socks With RFID Solutions From STS and Alien Technology®

GEL-AL of Turkey Sees Significant ROI in Six Months

MORGAN HILL, Calif.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Alien Technology, a leader in Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) Ultra High Frequency (UHF) products and services, today announced that STS, a member of Alien Technology’s Value Added Solutions Provider (VASP) channel partner network, has successfully completed a closed loop, EPC compliant tote application for GEL-AL. As a result, GEL-AL, the largest sock manufacturer in Europe, has seen a 40 percent improvement in productivity at its Istanbul manufacturing site.

Based in Turkey, GEL-AL produces over 83 million pairs of socks annually for many of the world’s best-known brand names in sportswear. Each day at the company’s plant, approximately twenty thousand sock-filled plastic totes travel throughout the various production stations. STS, a leading RFID systems integrator in Turkey, equipped each tote with an Alien® high-performance UHF/EPC compliant M-tag (inlay), which has been converted into a plastic ISO card. Individual totes are pre-programmed with a unique asset code consisting of the tote ID number, the work order and the sequence number. There are twenty ‘read points’ within the facility, with roughly thirty totes passing the various reading points at any given time.

“Before we implemented a RFID tote tagging system, we used large sacks to transport the socks internally to the various work stations - using barcode labels on the sacks and manually scanning each tote, which was very time-consuming and not very productive,” said Mr. Aydin Dogan, GEL-AL’s IT specialist. “We outfitted Alien’s field-proven ALR-8800 at each read point, targeting about four meters of read range and the Alien RFID system is achieving 100% read performance.”

Alien’s RFID solution has eliminated the former line-of-sight barcode solution and dedicated personnel are no longer required to oversee the traceability of the sock laden totes.

“At GEL-AL’s flagship manufacturing site in Istanbul, the entire sock production is now completely automated with RFID,” said Levent Yalcinkaya, Technopark director for STS. “GEL-AL now has one of the most modern textile production facilities in Europe. The company is a technology-focused manufacturer that understands the advantages of enhancing productivity through its IT investments.”

“Alien has installed numerous closed-loop UHF EPC compliant applications throughout Europe, South Africa and Middle East over the past few years,” said Stephen Crocker, director sales/channels EMEA and India for Alien Technology. “Once the customer realizes the tremendous production control advantages UHF RFID solutions can provide over conventional data capture systems, the next logical step is to expand the usage by tagging at the item-level. STS’ integration expertise has made the GEL-AL deployment a showcase for RFID success within the tote industry.”

About GEL-AL:

GEL-AL is the largest sock manufacturer in Europe. GEL-AL manufactures socks for the world’s most popular brands. All manufacturing processes (darning, sewing, coloring, washing etc.), are held inside the company. GEL-AL manufactures about 83 million pairs of socks a year and employs 1,200 people. GEL-AL increases their productivity by investing in IT Technology and continuous training for their employees.

About STS:

STS Technology (www.sts-rfid.com) is the leader technology and solution provider using UHF RFID technology. STS is the VASP of Alien Technology. STS offers turn-key, state-of-the-art solutions for the customers to increase velocity and reliability in their operations and to use their resources effectively. STS’s corporate headquarters is in Istanbul/Turkey, research and test center is in Kocaeli/Turkey. STS Technology is a member of EPC Global.

About Alien Technology

Founded in 1994, Alien Technology is a leading technology and product provider of UHF Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) Integrated Circuits (IC), tags, readers and professional services. Alien Gen 2 products, along with software solutions from partners, help solve business problems for customers to improve productivity, processes, security and asset tracking for closed-loop and supply chain systems. These solutions are currently implemented in industries such as consumer packaged goods, retail, manufacturing, transportation, airports and cargo logistics, government and defense, and more. Alien’s patented Fluidic Self Assembly (FSA®) technology and related proprietary manufacturing processes are designed to enable the manufacture of high volume, low-cost RFID tags. Quatrotec, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Alien Technology, is a specialized professional services and technology firm that provides complete solutions to meet the sophisticated requirements of the transportation industry. Alien’s facilities include corporate headquarters in Morgan Hill, CA; RFID tag manufacturing facility in Fargo, ND; the Alien RFID Solutions Center in Dayton, OH; Quatrotec’s offices at the San Francisco International Airport (SFO); and sales offices in the US, Europe and Asia. Alien is a member of EPCglobal. For more information please visit www.alientechnology.com

Hurricane Shutters Made From Corrugated Plastic

Friday, June 20th, 2008

WEK Minimize Waste In Production By Configuring Reusable Plastic Bulk Containers And Totes

WEK Industries, a Myers Industries, Inc. company, received Honda’s Productivity Improvement Award this year.  Read more about their efforts and the specifics of what they do here.

WEK Industries® Receives Productivity Improvement Award from Honda®
AKRON, Ohio–(BUSINESS WIRE)–WEK Industries, a Myers Industries, Inc. company, was presented with Honda’s Productivity Improvement Award at this year’s North American Executive Honda Supplier Conference in March.

The Productivity Improvement Award is given to Honda’s top suppliers that initiate activities that result in significant gains in productivity and efficiency. In addition, continuous improvement in manufacturing, delivery, quality and cost control standards must be achieved.

WEK, a designer and manufacturer of custom engineered blow-molded and injection-molded plastic components, supplies all eight North American Honda manufacturing locations from its facilities in Jefferson, Ohio, and Reidsville, North Carolina. Products range from HVAC ducts to air induction components, radiator tanks and many other custom items. WEK has been a supplier to Honda since 1979, when Honda opened their first plant in Marysville, Ohio. Today, WEK engineers a variety of components for the Accord, Civic, Odyssey, Pilot, Ridgeline, Acura TL and Element automotive platforms, as well as Honda watercraft, motorcycle and all-terrain vehicle lines.

“This is a significant achievement to receive this recognition from Honda,” said Brian Moroney, director of sales and engineering for WEK. “Our associates are committed to customer satisfaction and meeting or exceeding the customer’s demands for quality, delivery and value-added productivity initiatives. This award validates their exceptional performance. Our business has created a real partnership with Honda, and we are very proud of their recognition.”

At the annual supplier conference, Honda recognized 63 North American suppliers for top performance in quality, on-time parts delivery and productivity improvement last year. In commenting to the group of more than 500 suppliers and others, Akio Hamada, president and CEO of Honda of America Mfg., Inc. and leader of Honda’s North American manufacturing, stressed the critical importance of these factors. Honda autos built in North America represented 76 percent of Honda’s global record 2007 auto sales.

Over the last several years, WEK has invested in a variety of new technology platforms and capacity to ensure consistent production quality and engineer solutions around manufacturing challenges. In addition, the company instituted new processes to further minimize waste in production, inventory and handling and to maximize plant safety and cleanliness. “Our focus is to empower our associates to improve their work environment,” said Ron Ulery, plant manager for WEK’s Jefferson facility. “We emphasize taking pride in our work and product quality, which promotes customer satisfaction and keeps us growing.”

WEK is an ISO/TS 16949 facility, which is a quality management system related to automotive products that provides for continual improvement, emphasizing defect prevention and the reduction of variation and waste in the supply chain.

“We have a strong focus through the organization on the value we can deliver to Honda and our other customers,” added Moroney. “This includes not only engineering and prototyping, but also product fabrication and secondary operations that save them time when they receive our products. In addition, one of our sister companies in Myers Industries, Buckhorn®, is a North American leader in reusable transport packaging. We work with them to configure reusable plastic bulk containers and totes in which to ship many of our products to customers. These containers not only provide superior product protection in transit, but also take disposable waste out of the supply chain and help customers reduce material handling costs.”

About Myers Industries®

Myers Industries, Inc. (NYSE: MYE), parent company of WEK, is an international manufacturer of polymer products for industrial, agricultural, automotive, commercial and consumer markets. The Company is also the largest wholesale distributor of tools, equipment and supplies for the tire, wheel and undervehicle service industry in the U.S. The Company reported 2007 net sales of $918.8 million. Founded in 1933, Myers Industries celebrates its 75th Anniversary in 2008. Visit www.myersind.com to learn more.

About WEK Industries®

Founded in 1972, WEK Industries, Inc. is a premier designer and manufacturer of custom engineered blow-molded and injection-molded plastic components and products. Markets served range from automotive, off-road vehicle and motorcycle to industrial, commercial and agriculture. Products include HVAC ducts, air induction components, fluid reservoirs, dock floats, waste containers and a wide variety of specialty custom products. WEK is headquartered and has manufacturing operations in Jefferson, Ohio, and manufacturing in Reidsville, North Carolina. WEK is one of five brands in the Automotive and Custom Segment of Myers Industries, Inc.

For more information, contact WEK Industries at (440) 576-6940.

Variety Of Totes & Bins Available From Rubbermaid

Friday, June 13th, 2008

Rubbermaid offers many different sizes and options of plastic totes and bins.  You can read more about this here.

Why Closet Storage Systems Make Organization Easier

By Meryl Shana

Are you thinking about converting a spare closet for extra storage? You should be aware of all the options you have for installing storage closet systems. You can choose from thousands of different plastic bins, shelves, and boxes.

You’ll first need to decide what’s most important to you: Form, function, or a combination of the two. If it doesn’t matter how coordinated everything is in your storage area, you’ll have more options available to you. Canvas toes, rolling bins, and plastic tubs are just some examples.

Rubbermaid makes an amazing selection of plastic totes and bins that you can use in your closet storage. They range in size from small food storage containers, which are also great for hardware and craft supplies, to giant totes that are large enough for your biggest storage needs, like holiday decorations and patio furniture cushions.

Place the very largest bins on the floor, underneath wall mounted shelving, and fill the shelves themselves with an array of different sized bins.

Labeling is one of the keys to good closet storage systems. You should clearly label each tote, bin, and tub so that you’ll always know what’s inside.

It’s best to keep all similar items in one place, so that way you can tell what’s in any box just at a glance. You can use a label maker to make the process easier, and you can always peel off the labels and switch them out later if you need to.

Another option is to label the storage bin with a permanent marker, or you can tape a piece of paper to the side or front of the bin that describes the contents.

Clear or translucent professional organizer bins are a great choice, since you don’t have to create quite so detailed labels for them. You can see the contents at a glance, which means you can be even more organized and save yourself some time.

Rubbermaid has a great selection of these that you can use in your closet storage systems, too. Keep in mind that you can also get specialty storage for your closet, too, for gift wrap, craft items, and other hobby supplies and item.

China Banning Plastic Bags & Totes

Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

The Chinese government is banning production of the thinnest plastic bags.  This may save may save as much as 37 million barrels of oil currently used to produce the plastic totes.  You can read more about this here.

China Sacks Plastic Bags
Ban could save 37 million barrels of oil and alleviate “white pollution”

Thin plastic bags are used for everything in China and the Chinese use up to three billion of them a day–an environmentally costly habit picked up by shopkeepers and consumers in the late 1980s for convenience over traditional cloth bags. Fruit mongers weigh produce in them, tailors stuff shirts into them, even street food vendors plunk their piping hot wares directly into see-through plastic bags that do nothing to protect one’s hands from being burned or coated in hot grease. They even have a special name for the plastic bags found blowing, hanging and floating everywhere from trees to rivers: bai si wu le, or “white pollution,” for the bags’ most common color.

Yet, the Chinese government is set to ban the manufacture and force shopkeepers to charge for the distribution of bags thinner than .025 millimeters thick as of June 1—and no one seems prepared. “I don’t know what we’ll do,” Zhang Gui Lin, a tailor at Shanghai’s famous fabric market, tells me through a translator. “I guess our shopping complex will figure it out and tell us what to buy to use as bags.”

His wife adds: “Maybe it will be like this,” tugging a thicker mesh orange plastic bag she is using to carry some shoes. Such thicker bags may prove one replacement for the ubiquitous thinner versions.

The clothes makers are not alone. “I don’t know actually,” says a vendor of Chinese tamales, known as zong si, who declined to give her name. “I’m sure the government will come up with a solution. Maybe people will just eat it [the zong si directly.]”

The Chinese government is banning production and distribution of the thinnest plastic bags in a bid to curb the white pollution that is taking over the countryside. The bags are also banned from all forms of public transportation and “scenic locations.” The move may save as much as 37 million barrels of oil currently used to produce the plastic totes, according to China Trade News. Already, the nation’s largest producer of such thin plastic bags, Huaqiang, has shut down its operations.