Paramount Citrus expanding processing capacity for Halos
Paramount Citrus expanding processing capacity for Halos
Paramount Citrus will increase the capacity at its Wonderful Halos plant in Delano, CA, by 75 percent to meet increasing demand for the fruit, according to a company press release.
The expansion at the plant, which is already among the largest and most advanced citrus packinghouse in the world, will enable Paramount to process more than 52 million Mandarins a day.
As part of the expansion, Compac Sorting Equipment is designing an additional 30 lanes to be integrated into the pregrader, taking its total width to 70 lanes. The system will also add a fourth autonomous bin stacking robot and six additional bin filling lines, taking the total fillers to 52.
Compac solutions are considered the industry standard for machine vision technology and performance. This is achieved via Compac's advanced suite of software known as the InVision system. Using high definition digital cameras, mandarins are scanned as they pass under the sorter's inspection cabinet. Taking up to 30 images of each individual mandarin as it is rotated allows the software to build a complete 3D model of each mandarin instantly. The software is then able to assign each individual mandarin to its correct packing destination.
After the presizing process, fruit is stored until orders are received and then sent to a high-speed packing cell, which processes one type of product at a time. Each packing cell features a 10-lane Compac sizer for the confirmation of quality, and automatic demand-based distribution of the fruit to various net-bagging devices.
The number of packing cells will be expanded from five to eight cells in 2014 to cater to the increased production and demand for Halos. When completed in September 2014, this packing plant will be home to 150 lanes (15x10 lane) of Compac sorting units.
"Compac systems provide us with superior and proven technology," Jason Blake, vice president of operations in California for Paramount Citrus, said in a press release. "Computational methods are much more accurate than other vendors' systems. They provide a higher quantity of available data and product information, as well as more options for grading and sorting of various fruit characteristics."