Customers of SideDrive Conveyor Co., Souderton, Pennsylvania, are interested in features and benefits like better sanitation, less water and chemical use, and greater maintenance and accessibility, says Tony Maniscalco, business unit leader. “Can they get into it and work on it?” he says. “If there’s a bearing that’s difficult to access or difficult to take apart, that requires more man-hours.”
SideDrive’s customers would like to learn more about automated lines, Maniscalco says, to eliminate manual processes in areas like de-panning, dough handling, proofing, and cooling. “Optimization of space is a factor when taking things from the freezer to the floor level,” he says. “Instead of numerous declining conveyors, one spiral can be installed, and it reduces product loss while improving traffic access.”
The namesake conveyor that SideDrive rolled out last year is an “extremely sanitary” system that can be used and designed as a transfer-less conveyor system,” Maniscalco says. “It’s designed primarily for heavy washdown,” he says. “It could go into baking, ready-to-eat or frozen foods, the pizza industry, protein, poultry.”
The drumless system has fewer components compared with a traditional drum spiral system, and the design incorporates open-frame construction, allowing easy access for maintenance and washdown while providing few harborage points given the welded points and lack of horizontal surfaces, Maniscalco says. All of those factors optimize the system for better uptime, which supports improved throughput, he says.