From the idea to the prototype
However, before the first pallets of the new type rolled off the production line, EPAL and partners such as SICK had to work together to overcome a series of challenges. As part of its collaboration with the Fraunhofer Institute for Material Flow and Logistics (IML), EPAL decided to use QR codes. Other technical solutions, such as permanently installed sensors or RFID tags, were considered, but ultimately failed to meet one of the three evaluation criteria (cost, benefit, feasibility). The processes were either too complex or too expensive when it came to production or recycling.
Contact with SICK was initiated through the Enterprise Lab at IML. EPAL chose SICK because it was impressed by the performance of the image-based code readers, which achieve very good read rates even under difficult ambient conditions, and because the company was able to provide the integration software for the master computer, including system design, from a single source.
Together with experts from IML, printer manufacturers, and EPAL, the application experts and software engineers from SICK spent several months developing a prototype for this pallet serialization system. The devil was in the details; during pilot installation, the partners realized that printing QR codes on the wooden blocks was one of the biggest technical challenges. To overcome this roadblock, SICK provided the sensor data to the printer manufacturers so that the printers could be optimized to achieve a read rate of over 99%. SICK service technicians from Poland and Germany also contributed to the success of this process. Thanks to their practical experience in installing and commissioning Lector62x sensors, they were able to configure them optimally for the sometimes demanding ambient conditions.