Finning (Canada) sells, rents, finances and provides customer support services for Caterpillar and complementary equipment and earned approximately CDN$1.2 billion in revenue last year. Finning's customers operate across immense areas of Canada rich in oil and gas, minerals, forests, and fertile land.
Additional sales are generated from a steady demand for repair parts because Caterpillar equipment often operates 24 hours a day under very harsh conditions. High demand for parts, coupled with the distances that these parts often must be shipped, means that quick response to customer orders is vital.
Finning maintains on hand within its single parts distribution center in Edmonton, Alberta, some 55,000 line items -- tiny nuts and bolts to heavy diesel engines -- that typically cover 92% of customer requests off-the-shelf. Additional SKUs are available within 24 hours from Caterpillar depots in Spokane and Denver.
The distribution center is comprised of a 96,000 square foot heated warehouse (plus a 12,000 square foot mezzanine), a 12,000 square foot cold storage building, and a yard. Until recently, many small parts were maintained within the heated building on a manned, 8-lane, rail-guided mini-load AS/RS. In order to meet growing sales, Finning turned to Remstar International's horizontal carousel system to improve customer service and operating efficiencies.
"Components for the mini-load had become scarce and expensive, and two lanes had been removed due to their age," reported Lynn Stonehouse, Distribution Center Manager. "As picking volume increased over the years, productivity fell because too many man-hours were being wasted waiting to retrieve and replenish parts. Parts also couldn't be picked fast enough at peak times."
Carousels Automate the Picking Process
To boost picking and replenishing speed and efficiency, Finning replaced the AS/RS with eight Remstar horizontal carousels on two tiers. The system utilizes two clusters of four 10-foot high carousels -- one cluster on grade, the other cluster on a mezzanine directly above. The upper and lower level carousels are identical, and each level is served by a single workstation.
The carriers are 9'H x 30"W x 24"D (45.4 cubic feet) with shelves that hold plastic bins and corrugated totes containing the stored parts. Carousel part locations are maintained on Finning's portion of Caterpillar's worldwide Dealer Business System (DBS). The software that drives the Remstar carousels accesses the DBS database to locate parts.
Most Parts in the Carousels
Approximately 32,000 line items of the distribution center's 55,000 line items -- or 58% -- are located on the carousels. The remaining 42% are stored primarily in pallet racking and in several aisles of storage rack served by manned wire-guided Caterpillar order pickers and reach trucks.
Picking activity throughout the Parts Distribution Center (PDC) presently averages 4200 line items per day, with peaks as high as 5000. Of line items picked, some 47% (or about 2800 a day) are retrieved from the carousel system at an average rate of about 200 lines an hour over an entire working day. This is a 444% increase over the AS/RS's average picking rate of 45 lines an hour.
During peak times of the day when orders are heaviest, picking rates can reach 300 lines an hour. During less active times, the rate can fall to as low as 80 per hour. Many of the orders are also bagged and labeled (tagged), consuming additional operator time. The carousel's daily 2800 line item picks reflect some 1200 customer orders.
To speed carousel picking and enhance worker ergonomics, the highest volume parts are positioned in the "golden zone"(from knee-to-shoulder heights) that minimizes operator stooping and ladder climbing.
Two carousels on each level have 96 carriers, the other two carousels have 60 carriers. The carousel system fits comfortably under the warehouse's 25-foot high roof beams to maximize the vertical cube, and the carousels take less floor space and hold more parts than the AS/RS. Room has been set aside to expand the 60 carrier carousels to 96 carriers if required at a future date.
At startup, drawer cabinets were mounted on the lower halves of a number of carriers. By initially placing cabinets that were already filled with parts on carriers, Finning could bring the carousel system on line faster. Thousands of cabinet inventory locations were already programmed into the DBS. The cabinets were later removed and their contents placed in the carriers and in totes.
Seeing Higher Productivity
"Only two pickers man the carousels, one up and one down," the Distribution Center Manager said. "I can't directly compare the productivity of the carousels versus the former AS/RS because the two systems' parts loadings are different, and many more lines have been brought into the warehouse in the 1-1/2 years since the carousels went into service."
"Perhaps the most noticeable gains are two: The line items per day has increased by 32.6%, and the staff required to pick, pack, and ship the parts has increased by only 6.2%.
"The carousel system's picking rate is high compared to the AS/RS because parts are brought to the picker rather than the picker traveling to the parts," Stonehouse commented. ?The four software-driven carousels serving each workstation stay several picks ahead of the operator. The carriers are automatically pre-positioned and presented for picking via the shortest path. The picker never needs to wait for a part."
A Pick Light Tower tells the operator which carrier to pick from, the exact location and the desired quantity. Up to 14 orders are simultaneously batch-picked and placed in corrugated totes at the workstation. Put lights direct the operator to place the correct quantity of parts into each tote. Computerized picking has cut picking errors to well below 1%, which is lower than the previous ASRS system.
Identification tags are printed at the carousel system's work stations for small items picked loose. The items are plastic bagged and the tag folded over and stapled to the bag to seal it. This method is often called "bagging and tagging".
When a batch of totes is complete, they are transported via powered roller conveyors and diverters to an order consolidation area and then on to Packing and Shipping.
Replenishment Automated as Well
The carousel system's control software is electronically linked with the warehouse's DBS inventory database for picking and replenishment tracking as well as determining bin locations. The carousel software prints barcode labels that are affixed by the picker to totes to marry the totes to light table positions using a hand scanner.
Replenishment, which takes place during a 10 pm to 6 am shift, is also automated -- but in the reverse of picking. Incoming cases of items are placed on the workstation and scanned, the put-lights and pick-light towers direct the operator to take a SKU and place it in the carousel as indicated. While the operator is putting away one SKU, the other carousels are pre-positioned to allow operators to work as fast as they can and batch-replenish 25 line items at a time.
Random putaways are assigned by the DBS, although some locations have been manually slotted to speed the picking of complementary parts such as bolts and their corresponding nuts.
Carousels Support Ordering Peaks and Options
Incoming orders are typically heaviest in late morning and late afternoon, when mechanics break to do paperwork. Warehouse manpower is maximized at these peak times. Parts are usually delivered to branches within 12 hours after order placement.
Caterpillar equipment, a pipelayer for instance, is often essential to a customer's construction project. Having such equipment out of service waiting for a part can be extremely costly."
Finning has added e-commerce ordering through the Finning web page. This option permits a branch order to be conveyed electronically all the way down to the carousel picking system without human intervention.
The carousels have greatly facilitated the handling of rush orders as well," Stonehouse asserted. "A flashing red screen on the picking station computer monitors tells an operator that a rush order has arrived. He can suspend regular picking, key the system to retrieve the rush item, scan it into a tote, and place the tote onto the takeaway conveyor. The elapsed time is only a minute or so.
"Rush picks are more frequent than might be expected because of 'counter picks,' where branches and customers in the Edmonton area drive to the PDC, order a part, and wait while it's picked," the manager added. "Finning has thousands of accounts within an hour or two of Edmonton, and more than 100 of them walk in each day. Additionally, another 400 or so phone daily for parts on will-call. Rush picks reduce the carousels' average pick rate somewhat because they interrupt ongoing, fully automated batch picking operations."
Walk-in hours are helpfully long to support Caterpillar equipment repairs -- 6 am to 10 pm during the week, shorter hours on the weekends. The PDC is actually manned 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, to handle emergency orders.
The system has had virtually no unplanned downtime, only during the scheduled PM (preventive maintenance), where the eight carousels are shut down and inspected one at a time for a brief period to maximize the longevity and productivity of the system.