Stanrail
Puts Painting on the Fast-Track
When
Stanraila manufacturer of rail car doorssought to paint
large parts using a system that occupies only a small amount of
real estate, it turned to a supplier for assistance
By
Matthew J. Little, Editor
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A
rail car door is loaded on to the overhead conveyor. The inset
features a close-up of the light tree, which plays an important
role in the paint system. Once each station has performed its
specified task, a portion of the tree lights up. The system
is designed so that parts may not move forward to the next step
until all levels of the light tree are lighted.
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Stanrail
Corporation (Gary, IN) is a major supplier of rail car doors to
the railroad industry. An offshoot of Stanray Products, which manufactured
railroad freight car parts, it was established in May 1983 and entered
the door business in 2002.
Stanrail
made a decision to invest in a painting system and wanted to allocate
only 7,000 sq ft to the painting operation. All other aspects of
the production process are performed in-house. Given the fact that
rail car doors tend to be rather large, this made for a challenging
task.
Seeking
assistance with the project, Stanrail was referred to JBI Spray
Booths (Osseo, WI), a manufacturer of custom equipment for a variety
of finishing industries. JBI won the job based on its ability to
design and install a complete system in minimal time at an affordable
price.
We
had an idea of what we wanted and how to do it, said Rich
Rentschler, plant manager of Stanrails door facility. What
Stanrail wanted was nothing less than the ability to paint 40 doors
per shift with a 10-man crew, all while using as little of the plants
real estate as possible.
In
addition to meeting Stanrails demand for the ability to paint
40 doors per shift, the JBI system was designed with a few other
factors in mind. For one, not all freight car doors are created
equal. Not only are there different types of doors (plug doors and
sliding doors), but the doors are manufactured in a variety of sizes,
ranging from 8 ×12 ft to 12 × 12 ft. Additionally, the
doors are odd-shaped (tall and wide, but very thin) and feature
lots of nooks and crannies. The paint system was designed with these
specifications in mind.
Six
months after first being approached by Stanrail, JBI had designed,
manufactured, delivered and installed an indexing paint system that
met all of Stanrails requirements and occupied a mere 7,000
sq ft.
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At
the degreasing station, (above) parts are cleaned using a biodegradable,
non-hazardous solution. The operators on either side of the
door move around the door using pneumatic lifts. Note the operators
position in each photo.
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Anatomy
of a Paint System
Once
a door is loaded on to the overhead conveyor, its first stop is
a degreasing station, where it is treated with a coconut-oil-based
degreaser/cleaner called Eagle Kleen. Eagle Kleen is biodegradable,
non-hazardous and contains no VOCs, so it can be washed right down
a drain without being treated. It can be used at ambient temperature,
so there is no need for heating a tank solution, which translates
to a cost-savings for Stanrail.
The
Eagle Kleen degreaser is applied manually by two operators stationed
on opposite sides of the door. Because the doors are so large, they
remain stationary while the operators move around them using pneumatic
lifts. JBI and Stanrail are planning to replace the manual application
system with an automatic system that will make the process even
more efficient.
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In
the rinse station, (below) parts undergo a three-stage rinse.
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Once
the part leaves the degreasing station, it travels into a rinse
station. There, it runs through three rinse cyclesa hot rinse,
a cold rinse and then a sealing rinse to help prevent corrosion.
The rinse station is the key to the entire system, said
Mr. Rentschler. The time that the door spends at the rinse station
sets the standardor index timefor every other aspect
of the painting operation.
After
rinsing, the doors head into a high velocity, heated dry-off oven
where they are dryed. Afterward, the doors travel through two down
draft paint booths. The booths are identical to one another, except
for the fact that the operator positions himself on opposite sides
of each booth so that they can paint opposite sides of the door.
(The purpose for having two paint booths as opposed to one is so
that the operators dont paint each other accidentally.) As
with the degreasing station, the paint booths use pneumatic platforms
to move the operators around the part.
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An
operator paints one side of a rail car door. He stands atop
a pneumatic platform (inset) which allows him to navigate around
the large door.
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The
paint that is used to coat the doors is a waterborne coating supplied
by Carbit Paint Company. It is supplied to both booths from a single
275-gallon tote, using a paint application system manufactured by
Kremlin. Because freight car doors are exposed to the elements on
a regular basis, the paint is applied with a heavy mil-thickness
to prevent rusting and corrosion.
Once
the door exits the second paint booth, it enters a cure oven where
it is exposed to high velocity, heated air. Upon exiting the oven,
the parts are unloaded and bundled for shipping.
The
Nerve Center
One
of the key features of the paint system is the PLC-based control
system. Featuring an Allen-Bradley panel view with touch screen
controls, the control panel functions as the paint systems
nerve center, and enables the line operators to keep
close tabs on every aspect of the operation, and make adjustments
if necessary.
We
can monitor the entire line from here, says Mr. Rentschler.
Line speed, oven temperatures, wash temperatures, wash time,
drain time theres nothing that we cant control.
The
Most Valuable Component
The
single-most valuable component of the job was not a washer or paint
booth, but rather the relationship between finisher and supplier.
Stanrail was not very familiar with systems, so there was
a lot of meetings and discussions to come up with a system that
would serve Stanrail now and into the future, said JBIs
Dave Rohland. They were really good to work with.
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A
door makes its way from the first paint booth to the second,
where the other side will be painted.
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A
control system featuring an Allen-Bradley panel view functions
as the paint systems nerve center. Using the
system, operators can monitor and adjust virtually any aspect
of the paint system.
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Mr.
Rentschler agrees. JBI has been great to work with. They have
listened to our requests and followed-through on them and/or improved
upon them. Any job of this magnitude has some start-up problems,
but JBI has been with us all the way through.
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All Rights Reserved.
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