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Subject: 
LEGO Mexico Expansion means big business for Motan-Colortronic
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lugnet.mediawatch, lugnet.general
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lugnet.mediawatch
Date: 
Thu, 6 Oct 2011 22:15:12 GMT
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33089 times
  
LEGO Mexico Expansion means big business for Motan-Colortronic

MONTERREY, MEXICO (Oct. 4, 2011) -- Toymaker LEGO A/S has installed more than 500 Gravicolor gravimetric mixing and dosing units and 1,500 Metro loaders for its factory in Monterrey, Mexico -- the largest-ever single order for Motan-Colortronic GmbH.

Motan-Colortronic announced the news Oct. 4.

A year ago, LEGO of Billund, Denmark, announced plans to invest more than $100 million to expand the Monterrey plant, which injection molds interlocking plastic bricks for the United States, Mexico and Canada. The factory opened in 2009.

After the expansion, LEGO plant in Monterrey will have more than 700 injection molding machines, according to the news release announcing the auxiliary equipment installation.

Motan-Colortronic and LEGO did not specify the investment amount for the new material handing equipment.

The last installment of the Motan-Colortronic equipment was delivered in April. Detlev Schmidt, sales director at the auxiliary company, said Motan-Colortronic had as many as 20 installation technicians on site during the year. It took more than 50 large 40-foot containers to ship equipment to the site, he said.

LEGO also installed 24 large resin silos, mounted on load cells that are linked to 48 fully automatic Metrolink material selection and distribution units, which feed the resin to the injection molding machines. Material drying is performed by 16 Luxor dryers.

Officials of Motan-Colortronic, based in Friedrichsdorf, Germany, said more than 60 miles of material feed lines have been installed throughout the system.

LEGO and Motan-Colortronic have worked together for the last decade. Schmidt led the initial discussions for the latest Monterrey project in 2009.

Schmidt said Motan-Colortronic had already finished a complete central raw material handling system for more than 150 injection presses at LEGO Monterrey factory.

“Despite installation delays due to the swine flu in Mexico and volcanic eruptions in Iceland, we were able to complete the project on time,” Schmidt said in a news release.

But the new project is bigger and more complex, covering the major plant expansion, he said.

Material handling equipment that is very flexible and trouble-free is critical to LEGO plastics operations, according to Jes Bladt, the senior director and production manager at LEGO in Mexico.

“We have to be able to totally rely on timely delivery of all bulk raw materials to each one of the injection molding machines,” he said. “Here, straightforward and fast material and color changes are essential. All of the gravimetric mixing and dosing equipment is mounted on movable frames adjacent to the machines. This enables the highest degree of flexibility.”

Following the color or material change, individual units are moved to a separate area and cleaned, ready to be deployed again.

Each production line of about 25 injection presses are supplied with virgin and regrind material through two side-channel blowers -- Velocis blowers from Elmo Rietschle. Schmidt said they are quiet and maintenance free.

Plasticsnews.com

-end of report-



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