Tech Update: X-ray & Optical Inspection
New types of foreign material and product flaws detected
X-ray, camera and laser sorting technologies are coming of age in new configurations and applications that improve productivity and reduce false rejects while detecting harder-to-find flaws.

Eagle Product Inspection extended its X-ray product line to include two new dual energy approaches: DEXA for fat/lean meat analysis and MDX for general food processing. Source: Eagle Product Inspection.

The newest approaches in vision technology focus on invisible defects using IR wavelengths. This hyperspectral unit spots sugar ends in potatoes. Source: Key Technology.

Ishida is one of several companies launching simpler, lower-cost X-ray models for the inspection of small to medium-sized product. Source: Heat and Control.

Separate Loma X4 X-ray units and product paths for good product, rejects and reworked product comprise three customized inspection lines installed late last year for a large producer of chicken nuggets. Source: Loma Systems.

Eriez’s two most recent developments include the new E-Z Tec XR-SS side shoot single beam X-ray system for inspection of non-glass containers and its new PolyMag additive masterbatch designed to make plastic metal- or X-ray-detectable. Source: Eriez.







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Industry drivers
Dual energy X-ray inspection advances
Single X-ray beams
Hyperspectral highlighted
Catching chlorophyll
Detoxing nuts
SWIR for frozen fruits
Camera system in review
New detection solution designed to meet growing food safety standards
Thermo Fisher Scientific introduced the NextGuard X-ray detection system designed as an affordable unit with features often found in more costly higher-end systems. The new unit helps expand the technology to a wider customer base.
The first model, the NextGuard C330, is designed for packaged product contaminant detection and complements the mid- and high-end Thermo Scientific Xpert and POWERx X-ray inspection systems.
“Based on customer feedback, we’ve found that, traditionally, the total cost of ownership for X-ray systems has been too high for many companies to justify this technology,” says Bob Ries, lead product manager, metal detection and X-ray inspection, Thermo Fisher.
Based on Thermo Fisher testing, NextGuard offers up to 50 percent better detection sensitivity than Thermo Fisher’s previous value-based X-ray system, the EZx.
Features of the NextGuard system include its compact one-meter long size; multiple contaminant detection algorithms to increase detection probability; ability to modify, test and change detection parameters on the fly; wraparound detector intended to reduce ‘blind spots’; on-machine reject image storage for up to 90 days, and a QA check mode that automates operator audits and recordkeeping.
NextGuard’s features have also been driven by a changing industry landscape “where X-ray detection addresses a number of customer concerns, including evolving HACCP standards and requirements from some retailers for X-ray inspected product,” says Ries.
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