Laminex has been an iconic Australian brand for over 85 years, growing from a small tin shed in suburban Melbourne fabricating insulating sheeting for electrical circuit boards, into a large-scale manufacturing operation with plants across Australia.

The company is known for its expertise as a manufacturer of top-quality decorative surfaces, and its success can be attributed to an ongoing focus on product and manufacturing innovation. Throughout its history, Laminex has continually adapted, reinvesting in the skills, safety, performance and capacity of its plants through new equipment, training and development. The company’s evolution began following World War II when founder Robert Sykes began to look to adapt his techniques to make new products. He travelled to the US to research the fabrication of decorative laminates and began producing Australia’s first interior décor product range in the late 1940s.

With Australia’s cities booming, new house builds burgeoning, and demand for affordable furniture escalating, Sykes’ foresight to innovate was astute. He established the Cheltenham factory in 1952 and installed a cutting-edge hydraulic press to enable quicker production and expansion of the product range to meet market demand and improve returns.

The quest to improve and streamline production continues today. Product quality and consistency are paramount, carefully monitored throughout the manufacturing process from raw materials to finished product. These days, production is aided by robotics, and Automated Solutions Australia (ASA) partnered with Biesse Australia to provide Laminex Australia significant benefits through an automated system designed to improve throughput.

Laminex was looking for a versatile solution to handle varying load sizes, including a full panel or a steel sheet, smaller panel configurations and all cut panel configurations. ASA installed an automated manufacturing cell employing a Fanuc R2000iC/270F robot complete with a vacuum gripper enabling it to perform multiple operations. To extend the robots along the X axis, the cell includes a floor mounted rail incorporating a servo drive motor controlled by the robot, caterpillar tracks to allow cables and hoses to move with the robot, and a robot carriage plate for mounting the robot.

The cell controller incorporates an Allen Bradley PLC, a PILZ safety PLC and Ignition HMI. The PLC is programmed to interface to a highly functional operator control station and diagnostic terminal for the cell, as well as monitoring the cell safety devices and machine access door interlocks using specialty safety I/O cards connected to the overall control system.

In addition to a long reach of 2,655mm, the Fanuc R2000iC/270F robot also has a large payload of up to 270kg, boosting flexibility and enabling it to handle a full panel or a steel sheet, and also the smaller panel configurations with suction cups. The robot is also able to tilt panels for operator inspection of the underside in the infeed area. Depending upon the stage of operation and the operator’s determination of the panel quality, the robot returns the panel onto the infeed conveyor to head into the trimming facility; it is then either stored as accumulation stock or it can be rejected. This facility allows Laminex to offer cut-to-size panels to the customer, from 600mm by 600mm in 300mm increments up to a size of 1,800mm by 3,600mm.

A reject panel is one that, for whatever reason, has been pressed with a visual blemish. By handling the panels with the robot rather than the moving them by conveyor, the boards are inspected firstly on the top surface. prior to being flipped and tilted by the robot for close inspection on the underside of the panel. The robot services the inspection area, a panel storage that can hold many hours of production, and the outfeed area.

The storage area can store and retrieve panels from a storage area allowing for storage or rejected panels and incomplete batches. The scheduling software managed by Biesse and Laminex can continue to feed the saw from the incoming production press or from the storage area when the press is stopped. In the event that the saw is stopped for cleaning and servicing, the press can continue to operate with panels being sent to the storage bays.

Panels that have been trimmed in the saw are picked from the outfeed conveyor by the robot and stacked perfectly onto outfeed pallets ready to be strapped and shipped. The saw removes sharp and messy edges from panels prior to handling and the robot removes the challenge of handling panels that weigh up to 180kg – all within the cycle time of the press that produces the panels.

The main benefit to Laminex of this automated process is increased quality and throughput. Eliminating manual handling and servicing the inspection area robotically has provided a significant reduction in the time and effort required to process the panels, while improving quality control. The results achieved by this automation has meant the cell is now just another step in the process that delivers world-class decorative surfaces from Australia to the world.

As further testament to their success story, in 2018 Laminex was recognised in the Architecture and Design annual survey as the eighth-most “Top Trusted Brand”, as well as being voted the number-one top trusted brand in the Laminates, Solid Surfaces & Veneers category. These accolades reflect how the brand leads the way within the industry, demonstrating social, safety, and environmental responsibility.

www.automatedsolutions.com.au

www.laminex.com.au