Project Overview

Jar Washing Machine for Pickle Industry

Reducing Production Risk Before Automation Investment

This engagement began before equipment fabrication — at the risk stage.

A leading pickle manufacturer relied on manual jar washing, creating hygiene inconsistencies, slow throughput, and contamination risk. Investing in automation without redefining workflow would have compounded cost and complexity.

The objective was not just to build a machine.
It was to design a validated, space-efficient, food-grade automation system aligned with real factory constraints — before capital was locked in.

Today, the system operates live in production with stable, scalable output

The Business Challenge

Without strategic redesign, the client faced: and The business required a system that improved hygiene, throughput, and operational stability — without expanding factory footprint.

Investing in equipment without workflow clarity
Hygiene non-compliance under scale
Factory space over-expansion
Continued labor dependency

Strategic Intervention

This engagement extended beyond machine design into production strategy and risk validation.

User & Buyer Insight

Mapped contamination points, operator dependency, and spatial constraints to prevent over-engineering.

SYSTEM ARCHITECTURE

Designed a 3-stage automated cleaning process:
Vinegar wash → High-quality rinse → Hot air blow-dry, flow (wash, rinse, dry) validated for food safety and throughput before fabrication.

PROCESS DEFINITION

Defined core requirements:
Multi-size compatibility (50ml–1000ml)
Enclosed vinegar wash system
Inverted self-draining mechanism
Compact layout integration

PROTOTYPE & VALIDATION

Developed full working prototype including conveyor integration, pump systems, and drying units. Iterated for consistent 60–70 BPM throughput.

DEPLOYMENT ALIGNMENT

Installed and refined system within factory environment to ensure seamless integration with existing filling workflow.

Outcome

Stable automated throughput without factory expansion

Reduced contamination risk through structured cleaning flow
Multi-size jar handling without fixture changes
Lower labor dependency
Compact footprint aligned to production constraints

Strategic Reflection

This project demonstrates that automation is not about machines.
It is about defining workflow clarity before equipment investment.
When production constraints, hygiene standards, and throughput targets are validated before fabrication, automation becomes scalable — not experimental.
The result was not just machinery.
It was reduced operational risk before capital commitment.

Planning to improve your manufacturing efficiency?

Before investing in machinery, align workflow, constraints, and scale objectives.