Tru-Cape Fruit Marketing and its parent packhouse, have invested in
new technology which is set to improve their final product and reduce
quality-related claims, which cost the two companies millions of rand.
The
new technologies will make it possible to look inside the fruit to test
elements such as the amount of sugar in the product and check for
defects including internal browning, which could not — until now — be
determined without cutting into each piece of fruit. The company did not
disclose the amount of money it had invested in the new technology.
Tru-Cape
marketing director Conrad Fick said on Thursday 19 May the newly
installed Greefa 10-lane sorter can process eight pieces of fruit per
second per lane at Two-a-Day in Grabouw, and was the largest in the
southern Hemisphere.
"Combined with the new iFA
light technology that ‘sees’ into the heart of each apple or pear that
is processed, we can now deliver a better final product with fewer
issues," he said.
"Our packhouses have had
camera-scanning equipment — which increased productivity by 25% (and)
sorted faster and more accurately than before — for a while now, and the
1GB Digital GigE camera, which captures a full, high-definition image
of 1900 x 1024 pixels to make correct colour selection more efficient,
while no longer new, remains current."
Fick
said that as consumer tastes and demands become ever-more exacting,
Tru-Cape’s packhouses’ ability to add algorithms that sort to
ever-higher colour and blemish-free standards becomes essential.
He
said the investment will save millions of rand as Tru-Cape will be
improving productivity and returning maximum value to growers by not
delivering fruit that might be rejected on arrival because of not
meeting the packing specification, or of showing signs of internal
damage.
Source: bdlive.co.za
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