Lot numbers query
We have 4 batches (all the same) of a product to make that we will run in 2 separate blenders. Can we labels these with 2 lot's# ( 2 batches run thru the same mixer) or do we have to have 4 separate lot #'s?
Is there anything significant that happens between batches, such as sanitation procedures, inspection of parts, etc? Or do you add the next batch to a blender immediately after the 1st one? What is the run time for a single batch?
All same lots of ingredients going into all 4 batches?
Is there anything significant that happens between batches, such as sanitation procedures, inspection of parts, etc? Or do you add the next batch to a blender immediately after the 1st one? What is the run time for a single batch?
Nothing happens in between - we finish packing one load and dump the next. The blender is just not big enough to hold both. We are running 2 blenders at the same.
All same lots of ingredients going into all 4 batches?
Not always - but they are being tracked on the batch sheets. We were thinking 2 lots because of the 2 blenders . We are currently doing it as 4 lots - time consuming and $$ for testing on each lot.
To be clear, you are prepared to recall all 4 batches because of 1 lot of ingredient that may OR may not have gone in all of them? If the answer is yes, then I don't see why you can't give them a lot # by piece of equipment...........just be sure that #1 vs #2 don't get mixed up in case of a foreign material issue
I know it's expensive, and you could probably make a "composite" sample of all 4 batches for analysis purposes and still give them each an individual lot #.......50 grams from each of the 4 batches to form a 200 gram composite sample......which is they way I would go if I were trying to save a bit of $$$$ and my results has been good consistently.
Either way, if there is an issue on product from anylisis you're going to have to pull it all regardless of how you end up coding them
To be clear, you are prepared to recall all 4 batches because of 1 lot of ingredient that may OR may not have gone in all of them? If the answer is yes, then I don't see why you can't give them a lot # by piece of equipment...........just be sure that #1 vs #2 don't get mixed up in case of a foreign material issue
I know it's expensive, and you could probably make a "composite" sample of all 4 batches for analysis purposes and still give them each an individual lot #.......50 grams from each of the 4 batches to form a 200 gram composite sample......which is they way I would go if I were trying to save a bit of $$$$ and my results has been good consistently.
Either way, if there is an issue on product from anylisis you're going to have to pull it all regardless of how you end up coding them
Great - thank you! I had not thought of it that way.