July/ Aug 2022 BoxScore: 2022 Midyear Converters Roundtable

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Ask Tom

Material Testing and Why You Need It Now BY TOM WEBER

R

alph Young, my famous AICC counterpart serving the corrugated membership, and I recently co-hosted a webinar, aptly named Material Testing and Why You Need It Now! This subject has resonated with both of us for many years now, as more and more of our strategic raw materials are being sourced offshore, with little to no knowledge of exactly what waste papers, chemicals, and compounds are being used to manufacture them. This is precisely why we felt it was imperative to remind all AICC members that there are certain tests that should be performed in-house to ensure that all customers are receiving a product that will meet their manufacturing production-line criteria. For the purpose of this article, I will refrain from any graphic testing devices and comment only on the key attributes regarding functional performance-testing equipment criteria. The purpose is to advise members of what testing I consider to be the most critical today. My top 10 tests are noted below in no particular order. 1. Sutherland Rub Test • This test specifically identifies the ability of the substrate, inks, and coatings to withstand transit and handling. • The test can also be utilized to determine your best approach to meet your customer’s filling-line demands as well as storage and refrigerated/ frozen case concerns. 2. Score Bend Test • This testing can afford you, the carton manufacturer, the peace of mind of knowing that you have properly scored the material to provide for the best possible cartoning outcome.

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BOXSCORE July/August 2022

The data provided can allow for direct comparisons, as you need to compare and contrast various materials as substitutions become inevitable with continued supply chain woes.

3. Opening Force Test • The force required to open a side-seam glued folding carton will be somewhat directly proportional to the score bend test above, as well as the degree of folded score pre-break that is set up on your gluing lines. • The style of the carton blanks, along with your gluing parallel score pressure wheels, can be tremendous aids and can allow you to provide your customers with easy-opening cartons for extended periods of time. 4. Slip Angle/Coefficient of Friction Test • This inclined plane device will afford you the opportunity to gauge how effectively you have applied the coating to the carton surface—and how well you have cured it. • This test is critical to ensuring good carton filling-line performance and should be set up using data established from well-running carton blanks. 5. Dyne Test • This test is usually prescribed for more nonporous materials, such as plastics and other nonwoven materials. I have found it to be particularly useful to test incoming lots of papers and paperboards to determine their specific “holdout” characteristics.

• The data obtained can be crossreferenced with the slip angle, glue seam tensile pull, and gloss testing to tell a full story about that lot of material. 6. Glue Seam Test • This test is usually performed in a tensile pull device and gauges the force required to delaminate either the glue strip from the paperboard or the paperboard itself—weakest bond loses. • Folding cartons that are packaged heavily or tend to light caliper and “football” around the middle can succumb to a weakened glue bond or too thin an adhesive glue line. This device also can easily compare and contrast various adhesives (hot melt, cold dextrin, cold resin, etc.). 7. Cady Gauge Caliper Test • The use of a calibrated micrometer is essential to good carton-making. It should have a minimum of a 1-foot-diameter piston and preferably be motorized to eliminate any heavyhanded device operation. • A deep-throated Cady gauge will also allow the checking of folded score


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