POLYEXPERT — LAVAL, QUEBEC, July 2015

By Jim Callari
Editorial Director
Processors Edge

Download PDF
For blown-film processors serving high-end film markets, quality and the agility to shift quickly from one product to another generally trump line speed. While suppliers of blown-film extrusion equipment are developing complete engineered systems to provide just such performance, in some cases a far less costly investment in a new component or two can generate comparable results.

That’s been the experience of PolyExpert Inc., Laval, Quebec (polyexpert.com), which bills itself as the largest independent polyethylene film processor in Canada. The firm was founded in 1979 by Gilles and Ghislaine Plante and to this day remains a family-owned and operated business. Its 75,000 ft² plant employs 120 people, where 15 film lines are run around the clock. The extrusion capacity is split between single- and three-layer structures, and includes two high-stalk lines for HMW-HDPE.

PolyExpert initially focused on producing converter film, recalls David Douse, general manager. Over the years, however, it has diversified and now produces films in gauges from 0.4 to 6 mil for a wide range of applications, among them lamination sealant films, agricultural mulch films, bags for bread, diapers, ice, and courier applications, as well as rollstock for vertical and horizontal form-fill-seal, frozen food, and bottle sleeves. Layflat widths range from 18 to 90 in.

When equipment enhancements are needed, PolyExpert will either buy a complete new system or look to upgrade an existing line with critical newgeneration components. Last year, it evaluated various ways to improve film quality on three of its older lines. “Our goal is to produce the highest-quality film from all of our lines,” notes Douglas Lord, v.p. of operations. “On three of our lines that are about 10-years old, we evaluated new air-ring technology,” Lord recalls. “The air rings on these particular lines—7, 12, and 14 in.—were standard designs, and we wanted to upgrade to a system that offered automatic gauge control.” PolyExpert brought in several air rings as part of an evaluation process, and at the end settled on three new dual-lip External Gauge Control (EGC) units supplied by Addex Inc., Stoughton, Mass. (addexinc.com).

The EGC air ring is equipped with horizontally sliding teeth that adjust the air flow through the radially located vanes in the air ring’s plenum, causing preferential cooling on the outside of the bubble. A circuit board inside the air ring converts the mapped thickness profile into instructions for the scanning actuator, which slides a multitude of fingers (120 to 252, depending on air-ring size) in or out as needed, to open or close the airflow channels. Film thickness variation is corrected by the automatic adjustment of the air flow through the air ring’s vanes

“The really important issue for us was to select an air ring that allowed us to hit our target gauge quickly,” states Lord. “With all the air rings we looked at, the throughput rates we were getting were about the same. But the factor that swayed us toward the EGC was the adjustment speed. We make a lot of different products on the same line, so what’s important to us is to reduce setup times and really tighten the time it takes to produce commercial-quality film, which reduces scrap rates.” Compared with its previous air rings, the Addex EGC provided a 50% improvement in thickness control for all products on all three lines, Lord states.

One of the three EGC-equipped lines is also furnished with Addex’s Digital Internal Bubble Cooling (DIBC) system, which is said to deliver the fastest reaction time in the industry to ensure precise bubble control, helping processors to speed product changeovers and significantly reduce scrap. The five-sensor system features a high-speed, servo-controlled air-regulation valve that performs split-second corrections in bubble size (up to 20 adjustments per second). Users reportedly have switched from a 40-in. layflat to a 60-in. layflat in seconds instead of the minutes it took with the previous system.

All told, PolyExpert invested about $150,000 per line on the upgraded components, significantly less than it would have cost to buy just one complete new line. Lord says the company expects to buy one or two more EGC systems this year.