By: Paul Mills
When it comes to designing a racking system for a powder coating finishing line, too little time is spent talking with the people who actually work with the products. Failure to communicate can cost both time and money.
All too often, racking is an
afterthought. More time and effort
is spent thinking about the washers,
application equipment and ovens than
about how the parts are going to move
down the line to each of these stations.
As Antonio Beniquez, engineering
manager for Mighty Hook, observes,
“Racking is sort of the red-headed step
child of powder coating. It’s not as
sexy as ovens and washers and spray
booths. So while customers think about
their powder formula, spray equipment
and sensors, many of them don’t think
enough about how they are going
to hold the part or move it through
system. Yet, bad racking can have an
enormous impact on a coating line’s
technical performance and profitability.”
Dan Davitz, design and sales
executive for Production Plus
Corporation, the makers of Magic Rack,
agrees. “Parts are not just magically
levitated. Our job is to figure out the
best way to hold a part so it’s easy to
load and unload, and to present each
part for optimum results,” he says. “We
try our best to work with the whole
team as early as possible when a new
system is going in, but too often a
systems installer will not think about
anything below that conveyor itself.
There are times when we had to say, ‘you
are going to need a load bar because
your parts are 12 feet long and if you
put a hook on each end and go around
that turn—don’t expect your part to still
be there when you are done.’”
A common problem is that people
who need to work day in and day out
with racks are often left out of the
conversation, says Scott Rempala,
president and CEO of Mighty Hook.
This can build resentment, create
reluctance, and prevent the buy-in that
you need. “My advice is that when
you are looking at a rack development
program you get everybody together
who have to touch that rack and run
through all the issues. Just because
an engineer designs a rack for a given
density doesn’t mean that workers can
load, unload, or burn off that rack in
time. They may end up getting only
half the density that the managers
thought they were going to get. I’ve
even seen sabotage where workers
are purposely bending or breaking
tooling. If you don’t get the buy-in it
doesn’t matter how great your design
is, you are going to run into roadblocks
and political issues. You can have a
wonderful, well designed rack that is
only being used at 50 percent of its
capacity,” says Rempala.
Chris Merritt, general manager
of North America for GEMA USA,
agrees that more teamwork would be
helpful. “We are constantly talking
to customers about how to hang the
parts, how to get them closer together,
or how their operators will get parts
on and off the line. But I realize we are
rarely saying that to a racking company, and the information
may not be getting passed along to the rack designers.”
Merritt has seen problems coming from the this kind of
communications breakdown. “A rack manufacturer might
use an A-frame design with a six-inch-wide support. But, we
didn’t know that, and the booth was designed with a fourinch
throat. That’s a problem that could have been avoided.”
Racks for Powder Coating
“Designing racks for powder coating is different from
almost any other type of application,” says Davitz. “In
dip applications like e-coating, racks are submerged, and
with many liquid spray applications the racks get jostled
around by the high pressure of the spray. We don’t have
these problems with powder coating. That often makes it
simpler, and even sometimes less expensive since we often
have off-the-shelf products for powder coating a wide range
of simple parts,” says Davitz. By simple, he means parts that
already have holes to hang them, or a straightforward way
to fixture them. If that’s the case, then powder coaters can
get racks the same day or next day and be hanging parts
in minutes.
But, of course, many parts are not so simple. “That’s where
engineering experience comes in,” says Davitz. “A big part of
our job is to help people with problem parts that may not have
holes or an easy way to hold them. Other times, there may be a
hole on the part, but the customer won’t let us use it. The hole
may be part of the design part and a customer will specify that
nothing can come into contact with it.”
“Powder also tends to go in all kinds of different
directions,” says Beniquez. “Some basic things, like
the thickness of metal we use to build a rack can affect
the electrostatic spray. So we need to consider the part
orientation, and phenomenon like Faraday cage effects that
can make it more difficult to coat surfaces compared with
liquid coating.”
“Inconsistent part presentation is a problem with poor
racking,” agrees Merritt. “For example, recently I was
visiting a customer who was using racks designed so that
parts tilted the wrong way. That formed a kind of bucket
that resulted in excessive drag-out from the washer, causing
a lack of uniformity in the surface pretreatment and
potential failures of the coating,” explained Merritt.
Staying Well Grounded
Because powder coating relies on electrostatic
attraction, maintaining a good ground is critical, and the
racks and hooks form an integral part of the electrical
circuitry that must be properly maintained.
“You can’t lose the ground,” cautions Davitz. “When
changing parts from one cycle to the next, you risk losing
ground on the very next part you hang on an old hook—
even if it was brand new.” To prevent excess powder from
building up on hooks, racks and hooks are often designed
with only a few sharp points of mechanical contact.
“A major goal in our standard hook design is to ensure
that the part always comes into contact with the exact
same point. With that design, our customers can typically
run from four to eight cycles without a danger of losing
ground,” says Davitz.
“Minimizing the number of points of contact is a good
practice,” agrees Merritt, “and if you can hang to a blind
area that shields the hook from powder build up that’s also
a good way to protect the ground. So if you need to hang
parts from chains, for example, the fewer links, the less
chance for losing the ground,” says Davitz.
Density: The Key to Successful Racking
Beniquez says he feels as though he is constantly
reminding customers to consider racking parts as densely
as possible within the profile of their paint booth to get
the optimal amount of production out of their paint lines.
Davitz agrees that customers—even the very best shops—
often fail to concentrate on managing their part racking
density in a way that is the most profitable in order to take
advantage of their line.
“Line density directly impacts first pass transfer
efficiency,” observes Merritt. “From an electrostatic
standpoint, big, open holes on the line mean spraying
when there’s no product present. That means doing extra
work.” The best practice is to load the lines densely even
if that means that there are larger gaps on the line between
dense racks of parts. “On an automated line, in particular,
if there’s going to be a hole on the line we would prefer big
gaps on the line so we can utilize the gap and turn the spray
guns off,” says Merritt. “You might say there’s a ‘sour spot’
where the gap is too small to be useful and too big to be
efficient.”
“The most impressive system I have seen was powder
coating at 70 feet per minute,” recalls Davitz. “I found
that that kind of productivity was determined by how
they loaded and unloaded the line. That plant manager
explained that he did not need to slow the line to ‘people
speed’ if he could load and unload racks offline. The
manager looked at me and asked, ‘Is there any other way to
run a system?’”
Often, designing racks means finding the balance between
designing tooling for specific parts and designing tooling
that offers more flexibility. “We have a customer that paints
24,000 different parts,” says Beniquez. “So we developed
racking solutions designed to be adaptable and yet provide
very dense racking. For example, we have crossbars that can
be easily moved to different heights in a few seconds.”
“For job shops, density is their
lifeblood,” says Rempala. “The ones
that think seriously about it are the
ones that stay in business in the long
haul. At OEM or captive shops, you
have plenty of knowledgeable, and
skilled people, but they often have
other processes to think about and
racking efficiency often gets over
looked. There’s definitely a continuum
that runs from modularity to
dedication. Job shops need modularity
while OEMs want dedicated tooling,”
says Rempala.
Rempala reflects on a trend that
Mighty Hook sees affecting their rack
design. “Manufacturers seem to be
trending away from high quantities
of a single part to more of a lean or
kit approach to coating. It used to
be more common to manufacture
a bunch of parts, put them in a
bin, and move them to the powder
line. Manufacturers are collecting
kits of parts and racking them
together. I think this is driven by a
transformation to lean manufacturing,
but it’s also more efficient since they
don’t handle the same part as many
times. There seems to be a trend away
from inventorying parts towards
building to order.
Words to the Wise
When asked for advice about
how powder coaters should
approach racking, Davitz suggests
that customers first consider racks
that offer versatility and can be
disassembled for quick changeover
without having to clean them between
cycles. Second, coaters should
make sure the racks are designed to
maximize line density. Try to load and
unload of parts offline to optimize
line speed. Finally, Davitz suggests
that operators figure out the actual
hourly cost of running the powder
line considering all of the chemicals,
utilities, electricity, maintenance,
labor, and other costs. “When one of
our customers estimated their cost, it
was well over $1,500 an hour. At that
price, you see how important it is to
make sure every foot of your powder
line is loaded optimally,” Davitz says.
“Racks may not be sexy,” says
Beniquez, “but we are not building
cheap equipment either. Our
customers are investing in a tool, and
they realize they need to take care of
them or they won’t work and they
might as well be throwing their money
in the garbage.”
Paul Mills is a marketing and business development consultant to industry chemistry and equipment suppliers. He has been a writer for the powder coating industry since 1994. Paul can be reached at 440-570-5228 or via email at pmillsoh@aol.com.
Editor's note: The above image is courtesy of Shaffer Metal Fab Inc. in Sydney, Ohio. The patented Magic Rack® II heavy-duty racking systems uses removable support hooks and vertical crossbars to connect multiple tiers on a powder coating facility.