I Love Lucy Assembly Line
I love Lucy. So much.
She makes the hum-drum laughable. Gives us company in the realisation that we are not alone in our gripes and struggles. Our concerns are heard and we learn to pin the legevity of humour to the most dire circumstances through laughing with our dear Lucy.In the scene below, Lucy is trying her hand at casual work as an ssembly-line worker. She goes into the job with her friend Ethel. Trussed up in white chefs hats and uniforms, they arrive at the factory ready to go. The manager meets them with a grim look and shows them their task:The girls try their best, but as you can guess, the experiment goes terribly wrong.The speed at which they are descended upon by the chocolates on their ribbon ascends and ascends. Until Lucy and Ethel, in their desperation to ensure that no chocolate makes its way to the end of the line without being packaged, begin to hide the chocolates in their chef’s hats, then their blouses and finally stuff their mouths with the chocolates.The manager comes back to check their progress and upon seeing the production line clean of of chocolates, she aproves of the girls and asks the factory warden to increase the speed of output. Lucy and Ethel are left to continue their maraud of sweets.Don’t let your assembly line go wrong.
Keep it in check and efficiently pumping through the products with fast labeling solutions.Markem-Imaje is a world manufacturer of product identification and traceability solutions, offering a full line of reliable and innovative inkjet, thermal transfer, laser, print and apply label systems and RFID-based systems. They handle assembly lines very well. With their ability to do continuous ink jet printing they can generate labels so quickly that it generates 62,500 drops of ink per second. How does it work?
A piezoelectric device called a resonator transmits acoustic energy to the ink stream. Each drop, exactly the same size, is propelled by a stainless steel cannon through an electrode where an electrical charge is selectively applied.The charged drops are then deviated by deflection plates and used for printing. Uncharged drops are recycled back into the ink reservoir.
The other core competency that marke-imaje offers, in addition to continuous ink jet printing is laser technology that harnesses an invisible beam of light generated by a CO2 source. This light beam is then steered by mirrors and focused through a series of lenses. This highly-concentrated beam of light then “burns” the substrate, leaving an indelible mark.
Posted June 18, 2010 at 2:17am
