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Determining Detectability of Detectable Products
Started by Simon, Oct 28 2018 06:41 PM
1 reply to this topic
#1
Posted 28 October 2018 - 06:41 PM
Determining Detectability of Detectable Products
Taking place:
Friday, November 02, 2018 - 03:00 PM - 04:00 PM UK Time
This is a 11.00 AM Eastern US Start
Presenters:
Robert Rogers, Senior Advisor Food Safety & Regulation, Mettler-Toledo Product Inspection Division
Webinar Overview:
Product recalls due to foreign material continue to occur. Common materials include metal, glass and plastic. Inspection technologies such as metal detection and x-ray inspection systems are capable of detecting these contaminations however it is important to understand the level of detection. Depending on the material type and the inspection device utilized, detection may be easier or more challenging. This presentation will outline general capabilities for both metal detection and x-ray inspection systems as well as explore what some materials manufactures are doing to make these material more detectable.
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#2
Posted 02 November 2018 - 06:22 PM
Chat logs from the webinar:
david : Jamaica in the house WHATS UP EVERYBODY!!!!!
Pauline : Hello from Germany!
kosaraju m : Hi Murali from KSA
Christina : Hello everyone from Tampa, FL
Bruce : Bruce J Green Bay
Cindy : Good morning
clifford : good day everyone, greetings from jamaica
JOCELYN LEE : Good morning from northern California
Autumn : Hello from North Dakota
christina : hello
Rancy : Good Morning
Vanda : Good morning from North Carolina!
hanif : good day everyone
Andrei Cerghet : Good Morning from Canada
Rachel Budke : Good morning from Kansas City!
Sylvia Smith : Hello evyone Mississippi
Brandee : hi
Pratiwi : Good nighr,
Joren : hello from Belgium
Karen : Hello from Michigan
Smeia : hello.from.uae
Sérgio : Hello from Portugal.
caroline Van Belle : hello from sunny Ghent
Claudia Alfonso : hola de CHILE
DANIEL : hi evrybody, from Buenos Aires
Jacqueline Barbosa : Hello from Mexico !
Kathy Miller : Hello from Tucson, AZ!
Tim Pheland : Hello from Edesia Nutrition in Rhode Island
Mastaneh Dalili : Hi Everyone
Enrique : Good morning from Alsip, Illinois
Tracy : Hello roommates! Florida here!
Anna : Hi from Romania!
Pratiwi : It's 10 p.m at Indonesia
Sandra : Good morning from Jamaica
Maryam : Hi.everyone
Ahmed Nady Farghaly : hi
Annette : Hello from NY
Shere-Dean : Good morning. Shere-Dean from Jamaica.
Lisa : Hello from Bellingham, Washington
DILEEP KUMAR GUPTA : Good evening from Dammam
Lauri : Hello from Kansas City, Missouri
Andrea : Hello from Liverpool New York!
Larry : Hello
Edward : good morning from Washington state
Steve : Steve Brown - Sunny Dover
Teresa : Hello from Akron NY
Vasana : Hello from Houston, Texas
Stephanie Hinton : Hi from Tennessee!
Kevin : Good morning from Maryland
Faadia : hello from Trinidad and Tobago
Patricia : Good morning from Sunny Jamaica
Sabina : hello from Springfield Missouri
Kathy : hello from Seward Alaska
Yehia : Hello from Cairo, Egypt
Muhammad : hi from Pakistan
Ahmed Nady Farghaly : hi Yehia
Tim Pheland : detecable bandaids? (required by BRC)
Cristina : Hello, from Alicante
kosaraju m : hi
Deyvid Ugalde : Good morning from Costa Rica
Simon Timperley : Please save question until the end.
Andreas : Hi from Texas
caroline Van Belle : we still see the first slide
Maryam : Hello.from.Canada
Jimmy : afternoon from Devon and a very full of grapes winery
Pauline : Thanks!
Tausi Abdul : Greetings from Tanzania
Tim Pheland : These BRC required (detectable bandaids) seem to be real tough to detect
Cindy : Thanks
Tim Pheland : Kathy we are in the same boat as you.... hopefully there is some info in this webinar regarding bandaids
Nila : Good day from Toronto.
Maria Luisa : Hello from Spain
Felicia : Good morning from Vancouver
Abdul Salaam : GOOD EVENING FROM QATAR
Tim Pheland : anyone help with the band-aid question? f you are BRC you MUST have this capability
christen : Thanks
heather : hI everyone from Boston
clifford : i can't get on the webinar
JEAN CARMONA : Hello everyone, greetings from Florida!
Simon Timperley : Clifford chrome and firefox recommended as less problems
Béatrice : Hello everybody from Madagascar!
Tim Pheland : band-aid detectable? xray? metal detection? niether?
Ivonne : hello frlom Toluca
Benjie : hello everyone from.Philippines!
VÃctor Manuel RodrÃguez Gonzà lez : hello from El Salvador
Brooke : We have bandaids that are blue with a metal strip in them so that they are metal detectable. Amazon sells them.
Enrique : Metal detctable pens, liners, labels, to be detectable it has to be a big significant piece, otherwhise it will not detect.
Tim Pheland : xray detectable???
Isabella : Metal detection: What test piece size are you using? And do you see false rejects with this?
Latha Murugesan : Can you please explain if there is an acceptable range for number of acceptable false rejects? for example, if you see 5 rejected packages and you run them through the metal detector again and the machine pass all those 5 packages, can you consider 5 as acceptable false rejects?
robert : will recording be available to share with colleagues?
Ryad Elramy : hello from egypt
david : I work with a Completely Dry Production Facility, This seems to apply more to wet production facilities where on my line would i apply the metal detection method?
Isabella : X-ray: Are you able to detect broken glass in glass packaging?
david : ?
christen : how are we getting the certificate after this webinar ?
Tim Pheland : What success have you experience with "xray" detectable bandaids? We seem to be having trouble detecting them consistently.
Jen : Do you have any advice for x-ray machines and slipped images? We seem to experience this a lot, number of units out exceed number of units inspected.
Michelle : We are organic facility. Xray machines our certifier tells us some are ok to use some are not. Irradiation is their concern. Are there types of xrays to look for to avoid their concern?
Pauline : we observed that detectable plastic material are usually more breakable than non detectable plastic, therefore since they are not so well detected, isn't the risk of foreign body really increased?
Joren : In case of x-ray detection, are systems/algorithms able to distinguish between overlap of multiple products (higher density) and actual contaminants?
Krista : We produce starch and we often see false rejects on our in line metal detector due to the static of the product. Is there a way to adjust the detectors to avoid this?
André : is it need to he supplier of metal detector, to validate every year hte test pieces , that is given by themself?
Pauline : Some foreign body are visible on the X Ray Screen, but are not detected by the machine : are there systems which would allow to detect unusual forms?
robert : could recycled pack material of carton cause false rejects ?
Tim Pheland : can you please address the BRC required x ray detectable band aids being un-detectable
maria : i work with a completely herb production facility we dont have a metal detector ? we need one?
Deshraj Sharma : hi . deshraj . india
Tim Pheland : Talking about the "crop" or "masking" feature for the jar example... is this an actual crop of the image or is it a function of defining and reducing the pixel range within that location?
robert : thanks for your explanation and presentation
Deshraj Sharma : hi
Ndeye Mossane : thanks for the presentation
Pauline : Thank you for the useful info and your answers!
Annette : Thank you both!
Andreas : Great , thanks
Sylvia : Thanks North Carolina
Rachel Budke : Thanks!
Ndeye Mossane : thanks you Mr Simon
JOCELYN LEE : Thank you!
Get FREE bitesize education with IFSQN webinar recordings.
Download this handy excel for desktop access to over 180 Food Safety Friday's webinar recordings.
https://www.ifsqn.com/fsf/Free%20Food%20Safety%20Videos.xlsx
Check out IFSQN’s extensive library of FREE food safety videos
https://www.ifsqn.com/food_safety_videos.html
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