PRESS

Spiral Freezer Keeps Products Moving

Spiral Freezer Keeps Products Moving

Don’t let the process of purchasing spiral freezers turn your business around and around. Let a spiral freezer from The Frain Group keep your products in motion. The spiral freezer has a circular design that allows your product to move from the top to the bottom of the freezer and then back again. The spiral freezer is set in a cage or box that allows for proper product movement. Many of our satisfied customers ask us to explain some of the components of this fascinating technology. When customers ask us to explain how the cooling process works, there are two responses to this frequently asked question. The first option is a cooling process called “direct expansion”; direct expansion is a result of Freon or ammonia moving through evaporator coils. The second option is “direct impingent”; this process uses cryogenic gases or Co2 or Nitrogen. Both processes are effective. Please feel free to speak to one of our talented staff for more information of either of the above processes.
At the Frain Group, you can expect to find the most respected brands in the industry within our extensive on-line catalogue. Look for leaders in spiral freezer technology like Frigoscandia, APV Crepaco, Harris, Air Products, and Praxair to meet your business needs. These well-established manufacturers along with numerous that you will find in our inventory give The Frain Group one of the largest selections high-quality spiral freezers available on the market today. Take a moment to explore our wide selection of goods.

A sign inside Frain Industries’ new showroom sums up the company’s unique model: “Zero missed opportunities – OEMs build it, Frain buys it, end users rent it, repeat.”

The 200,000-sq-ft showroom at Frain’s Carol Stream, Ill., facility physically embodies that model, housing over 2,000 packaging and processing equipment solutions from over 70 OEM partners. The company purchases this equipment new from OEMs, stocking its rental fleet for CPGs who need a quick turnaround installation.

“If an OEM’s customer is looking to have a piece of equipment built, it could take 10 to 12 months to build it new. We can get them up and running and producing in a matter of two weeks for packaging equipment. If it’s processing equipment, a lot of times we can turn that in 48 hours,” explains Mary Woodrick, brand ambassador at Frain.

Equipment all in one place

Frain’s rental model is on display on the showroom wall. Source: OEM Magazine

Equipment all in one place

The showroom lines all this equipment up so it’s ready as needed, creating benefits for CPG customers, OEM partners, and Frain’s own operations. Central to that is the new level of organization it affords.

“We’ve never been able to organize equipment by OEM; we were scanning location markers and placing machinery wherever it would fit,” says Woodrick. “That was a big purpose of this showroom, to be able to showcase everything that we have from ADCO, and then everything that we have from Pattyn, and so on.”

Since all of Frain’s inventory of OEM equipment is organized in one place, it also acts as a de facto selling floor for the company’s OEM partners.

“Many of the OEMs don’t have all this machinery on their floor,” explains Woodrick. “Sometimes a customer wants to touch, feel, and see the equipment, so the OEM can bring their customer in here and show them. Even if it has nothing to do with the rental, they’re welcome to bring customers in here.”

Equipment all in one place

The company can install processing equipment like tanks, kettles, mixers, or blenders at CPG facilities in as little as 48 hours. Source: OEM Magazine

Bridging the lead-time gap

One of the biggest benefits of the showroom and rental model it supports is the flexibility it enables for CPGs, even if a direct order for a new piece of OEM equipment is already in the works.

“Because of the long lead times that OEMs have, what are you going to do while you’re waiting for a piece of equipment? We fill that gap,” says Steve Kuhlman, director of sales and marketing at Frain.

That same availability can also help CPGs to cut back on risk when scaling for a new product.

“New products fail quite often. Rent [the equipment], test it out, get your permanent piece if it’s going to work,” says Kuhlman.

Frain even has customers who return each year for the same equipment on a seasonal basis. One manufacturer rents a bagger and scale system to handle extra holiday demand for their product and returns the equipment once the season winds down.

It also works as a backstop for the unexpected.

“We’ve had people whose metal detector went out, and they couldn’t ship without their product going through it. Production that was supposed to be shipped out that day was sitting, and they had no room for it, so they could rent a metal detector,” Woodrick says. “We’ll have people jumping through hoops here, because we know how important it is for customers to be able to get their product to market.”

Bridging the lead-time gap

A sign in Frain’s showroom outlines the range of scenarios that drive CPGs to the rental model. Source: OEM Magazine

A plug-and-play process

Getting started with Frain doesn’t require a trip to Carol Stream. A phone call or Zoom meeting is often enough to get moving.

CPGs can start by sending in a product sample, and Frain’s engineers, many with 30 or more years of experience, can determine the right equipment for the customer’s specific application. For customers who do visit, Frain even includes full lines of equipment on the perimeter of the showroom.

“It gives the customer an idea of the footprint that you need for something like this,” says Woodrick. “You can always look at it on a drawing, but actually seeing it gives a much better visual.”

After picking out the right equipment for the job, Frain offers to set it all up for a factory acceptance test, ensuring the mechanical, pneumatic, and electrical components are up to the latest standards and ready for production.

“It’s plug and play,” says Kuhlman. “We’re setting their equipment up so when it leaves our dock, it’s pretty much ready when they get it on-site at their plant. It’s all set up since we’ve dialed it in with the right tooling, so they’re ready to go with less downtime.”

Once the equipment is on-site, Frain can even offer startup assistance and training to ensure a smooth start to the new production process.

For Kuhlman, the biggest challenge remains conveying the scale of what Frain offers to customers who haven’t yet made the trip.

“Once they understand the extent of the equipment that we can offer and how we can assemble it for their specific use – you can say the words, but this showroom helps to come in and see that it’s real.”

Example production line
An example production line in the showroom gives a sense of equipment footprint, from case erecting to robotic palletizing. Source: OEM Magazine

More Frain in the Press