With its partner, CEIA, Heat and Control, Hayward, CA, recently introduced the THS/MS21 multi-spectrum metal detector, with optional USDA-certified construction. It utilizes a wide spectrum of frequencies, thus eliminating false rejects caused by product effect without having to reduce metal detection sensitivity. Autolearn software scans products in a single pass to reduce setup time and inspection errors. Bluetooth connectivity eliminates the need to access the detector’s interior for programming and data collection; Ethernet connection also is available.
“CEIA builds THS/21 metal detectors with horizontal apertures for conveyor applications and round apertures for drop-through products. The metal detectors also are available in pre-assembled systems, complete with conveyor, controls, and an ejection device for conveyed, falling, and pumped products,” says Todd Grube, product manager, inspection systems, Heat and Control.
Fortress Technology Inc., Toronto, offers the Interceptor DF metal detector, which uses multiple coil sets to drive the electromagnetic fields in different directions, looking for signals over a broad spectrum, from multiple angles. “The stronger disturbance from one field compensates for the weaker signal from another. This increases the probability of identifying and rejecting products containing non-spherical metals, including difficult-to-spot flat metal flakes,” says Pierre DiGirolamo, director.
Eriez now offers 6- and 18-inch belt sizes for its Xtreme Metal Detector conveyor systems with automatic rejects. They are designed with push arm or air blast rejects, lockbox, reject confirmation, stainless steel motor/reducer, improved guarding, emergency stop, and side guides. An icon-driven interface is patterned after cell phones. “In practice, this means operators receive instantaneous visual feedback in real-time to help make decisions regarding the equipment’s set-up and performance,” Spurgeon says.