Tomra Recycling’s latest generation Autosort installed at EarthTechnica’s test center in Japan
Tomra Recycling has announced the installation of its new Autosort in the Yachiyo Technical Center of EarthTechnica Co. Ltd, an authorised dealer of Tomra Recycling
Autosort combines the latest technologies such as the patented Flying Beam and Deep Laiser technology. The machine’s illumination unit, Flying Beam, is positioned inside the scanner, thus protected from external influences, and ensures a homogenous light distribution across conveyor belts of up to 2,800 mm width. Another outstanding optional technology is Deep Laiser, which uses smart recognition to distinguish between two overlapping objects, enabling object-based recognition even at high throughputs. Also, an integral part of the sorting unit is its sharp eye that identifies critical chemical property differences and even the finest molecular differences in materials. Thanks to its higher light density and point-scanning systems, sharp eye not only separates single-layer PET trays from bottles, but also sorts mixed PET into different polymer types.
Autosort is a versatile product that can handle a wide range of applications, such as identifying in homogenous plastics fractions, wood waste, paper, stone, and metal. The flexibility and upgradeability of the technology allow it to respond to complex and changing market and customer requirements, making it suitable for a wide range of customers in a variety of industries. Tomra Recycling expects an increase in demand from more diverse industries.
With the installation of the latest Autosort in the Test Center of Tomra’s distributor EarthTechnica in Japan, existing as well as future customers can reap various benefits:
- Testing their own material on the most-advanced sorting solutions before making an investment
- Identifying the best machine setting together with a Tomra technician/engineer
- Developing innovative workflows maximising operational productivity based on the analysis of the tests
- Reduced travel costs: previously, Japanese customers had to ship their waste to Germany to test their materials on the new generation Autosort. Now, they can see their waste being processed by the latest machine and don’t need to travel oversea.
Focusing on customer experience, Tomra provides videos of the tests in case a customer cannot join personally. As a company contributing to the acceleration of a circular economy through both technological innovations and cross-value chain collaborations, Tomra Recycling will further strengthen it’s more than 20 years of partnership with EarthTechnica and supports its customers’ businesses with cutting-edge sensor-based sorting solutions and consultancy.