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CASE HISTORY: MATERIAL
HANDLING Cerro
Copper of Canada Benefits from Increased Capabilities Material handling
system overhaul uses less energy and needs less maintenance, while giving
this round-the-clock manufacturer more finishing capacity. An
exclusive Online Feature from the editors of mro-esource.com © 2000 Machinery
& Equipment MRO (1,115 words) A new chain-driven
accumulation conveyor system, used to move items weighing several tons,
has reduced maintenance and energy use, and created a cleaner work
environment for a major copper products manufacturer. Though copper pipe has
been used to carry water since the days of the Egyptians, it was not until
the late 1920s that practical and economical thin-walled copper plumbing
tube was developed to compete with iron pipe. Once discovered, it did not
take long for copper - an easily worked, corrosion-resistant product - to
replace threaded iron pipe as the standard for many residential and
industrial uses. It was this market that
Cerro Copper Products Co., a member of The Marmon Group of companies of
Sauget, IL, USA, decided to enter. Cerro Copper entered the Canadian
market in 1989 as Cerro Copper of Canada, a division of Cerro Copper
Products Co. Cerro Copper Products has become the largest and most
productive copper tube mill in the world - a position it holds to this
day. The former copper scrap
dealership was just a few years into production of its copper tubes when
World War II ended. Following the war, the company was well equipped to
meet the demands of the greatest building boom in the nation's history.
Copper plumbing tube was now the standard for most home construction,
putting Cerro Copper at a significant advantage. Cerro Copper of Canada,
located in Etobicoke, Ont., was established as a result of increased
demand from Canadian customers who needed a "dependable and
ongoing" source of supply beyond the one existing domestic producer.
Cerro's entrance into the Canadian marketplace gave customers - plumbing
and HVACR distributors - a much needed local source of supply for copper
tubing. To maintain its leading
position in the copper industry, the company, which employs 800 people in
Sauget and Etobicoke, has had to update its material handling operations
along the way. Beginning in 1997, Jim Hintz, director of engineering for
Cerro Copper, began the first of a two phase manufacturing and material
handling system overhaul to the company's 250,000 sq ft manufacturing
facility in Sauget. The result: increased manufacturing capabilities for
the copper giant. An integral part of the new system, completed last year,
involved the installation of 750 square feet of chain-driven live-roller
accumulation conveyor from Mathews Conveyor of Port Hope, Ont. and
Danville, KY, USA. Mathews Conveyor is a material handling total systems
provider with 94 years of experience. Along with new conveying
systems, Cerro Copper's updated system also involved the purchase of a
third spinner block, a new straighten and cut-off machine, and new
transfer lifts and turn tables. The new system created a total of six
lines, each capable of storing seven coil-handling baskets each. All of
the six lines feed off their own machines, including four straighten and
cut-off machines and two tandem coilers. Previously three lines fed five
different machines, resulting in severe bottlenecks. The new system gives the
company more finishing capacity and results in a larger number of products
that can be put into inventory. Because Cerro Copper ships from numerous
storage warehouses, stocked inventories are needed to meet constantly
changing customer demands. How copper tubing is
made Production of copper
water tubing at Cerro Copper begins when copper cathode and/or high grade
copper scrap is received and unloaded. The copper is melted, purified and
cast into logs which are cut to make billets. The billets are reheated and
extruded under water to make hollow shells. The shells are cold drawn on
bull blocks and coiled. Next, the coiled copper, roughly 9 ft in diameter,
is lifted by crane and placed into a heavy duty metal "basket"
weighing 1,100 lb. Baskets are 10 ft in diameter and two feet deep and are
the core of Cerro Copper's coil handling system. During finishing, the
coiled tubing exits the baskets and is fed into spinner block machines
that reduce the wall thickness and diameter of the tubes to user-specified
sizes, usually 1/2" to 3/4" in diameter. Lastly, the tubing
feeds into straighten and cut-off machines that cut the tubes to finished
lengths. The copper tubes, or pipes, are then distributed to plumbing
distributors for use in building and home construction. Old chain system
needed improvement Prior to the installation
of Cerro's new material handling system, the coil handling baskets were
transported using dual-strand chains about 3" in width. The chain
system was less than ideal for several reasons, according to Hintz. "With the old
system, the baskets accumulated by bumping against each other, which was a
problem in itself," said Hintz. "As a group, the baskets weighed
several tons and put a lot of strain on the continuous running chain. The
chains also required a lot of lubrication, creating an overall dirty
environment." Unlike the previous
system, the new conveying system from Mathews Conveyor uses chain-driven
live-roller accumulation conveyors that require little or no lubrication.
In addition, the conveyors use a proximity sensor that allows baskets to
accumulate in zones without line pressure build-up. When the proximity
sensor sees a basket in a particular zone, the adjacent zone is stopped
and a safe 4"to 5" gap is left between baskets. "The new system also
uses less energy because the conveyors only run when transporting
baskets," Hintz said. "This translates into lower production
costs for Cerro Copper." The new conveyors mean
lower maintenance for Cerro Copper as well. With the old conveying system,
entire stretches of conveyor had to be removed and replaced when problems
were detected - not a welcome activity for a company that runs around the
clock. With the new conveyors, sections of conveyor can be easily replaced
if necessary. "We purchased
replacement parts during the initial installation that we haven't had to
touch," Hintz said early in 1999. "The conveyors are performing
as we anticipated, and that makes us very happy." For now, however, with
its manufacturing and material handling system fully overhauled, Cerro
Copper will continue to manufacture its copper pipes for plumbing
distributors throughout Canada and the U.S., just as it has done for much
of the past 75 years. This report was
prepared for mro-esource.com Online Features by Charlene Cloney. Placed
online June 1, 2000. For further information, visit Mathews Conveyor at www.mathewsconveyor.com,
or contact Cerro Copper of Canada in Etobicoke, Ont., at (416) 745-7300,
or visit www.cerrocopperproducts.com.
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