THISTED, DENMARK — Since the launch of its SEA.IQ optical sorter, Cimbria said it has experienced rising demand for its optical sorters in general.
Cimbria’s SEA optical sorters can detect and reject raw material with non-conforming colors or shapes with precision and speed.
The demand for the highest quality seeds, grains, beans, rice, and other types of raw material for food production is constantly increasing. At the same time, reducing postharvest losses is a key measure with great potential. A recent insight from McKinsey & Company describing the postharvest losses in various steps of the value chain estimates losses in the processing step to be between 5% and 30% depending on milling type.
To meet these demands, Cimbria’s optical sorting machines and systems ranging from UV visible to NIR/InGaAs are becoming more and more sophisticated. The use of highly specialized technology allows an immediate advantage in quality and operating costs.
With the recently launched SEA.IQ using a combined multispectral vision system and ultra-violet possibilities, the popularity of Cimbria’s optical sorters has reached new heights.
“In a world that focuses on research to guarantee the necessary quantities of food for humanity, Cimbria supports not only the enhancing of food commodities,” said Michela Pelliconi, head of sales optical sorting. “Our commitment is also to guarantee healthy and excellent quality food for future generations. Our SEA optical sorters are simply fantastic products that guarantee safety and constant premium quality in the final products. The growing demand from customers for high-end optical sorters like the SEA.IQ series proves that we are once again on the right track.”
Thanks to real-color technology, the SEA.IQ sees better than the human eye. The all-new optical system integrates RGB, NIR, and SWIR or UV. They work in multi-frequency to match multiple data collected during tens of thousands of scans per second.
The ability to sort different types of commodities in the same machine and with more than 75 scans of every single grain is another key advantage in Cimbria’s optical sorters. It’s not unusual for customers to handle grains, beans, and rice in the same plant, which makes flexible machinery highly desirable.
“The perfect optical sorter is the one that combines precision mechanics, dedicated electronics, and the best and most advanced vision technology,” Pelliconi said. “This is what our SEA optical sorters do. Our test room in Imola, Italy, continuously receives visitors from all over the world who are looking for the ideal solution as well as a reliable partner to be by their side throughout the entire process. Cimbria’s several decades of specific research and activity on optical sorting guarantees the customer a solution with high, constant, and long-lasting performance over time.”
With more than 75 years of expertise, Cimbria has a leading position in top-range solutions for food handling and storage and a strong and powerful setup to realize the ambitious and complex development of products and turnkey projects.