City of Düsseldorf, Germany, close to the Hansella site.
Headquarters of Hansella.

Profile

Location

Viersen, Germany 

Headcount

130

Hansella is one of the most traditional German companies in the production of confectionery products such as hard and soft candies, chewing gums as well as bars and similar products. Hansella is one of the world's most important manufacturers of corresponding kitchens and other machines for processing the corresponding masses as well as complete production and processing lines. If the corresponding projects also involve the processing of chocolate, the cooperation takes place with the company MF-Hamburg, also a company of the Rotzinger Group. Many of Hansella's customers value the company's technical center in Viersen, where new recipes can be developed and tested. Hansella is also the competence center for filling and capping containers, especially for the pharma and cosmetics industries. Hansella has been part of the Rotzinger Group since the beginning of 2021. Industries:
Food & Confectionery
Pharma packaging
Cosmetics packaging
Other industrial packaging
Soft candies.
Stories Confectionery

Without trim to the finished bar

asically, it’s quite simple; once the recipe for a bar has been established, the task is to produce as many bars as possible from the mass produced. There are two obstacles to this: trim and varying density of the mass slap.

asically, it’s quite simple; once the recipe for a bar has been established, the task is to produce as many bars as possible from the mass produced. There are two obstacles to this: trim and varying density of the mass slap. The latter cannot be easily avoided and leads to a lower density of the mass carpet at the edges than in the center. And this in turn leads to the fact that the weight of some bars, does not correspond to the weight that is indicated on the packaging. Hansella, the Rotzinger competence center for food processing, has succeeded in solving this problem. How? With the help of the WRF Flex flexible roll former. And how exactly does this proclaimed flexibility manifest itself? The WRF Flex is the only roll former on the market on which the width of the mass slab can be precisely and continuously adjusted without interrupting the production process. The phenomenon of lower density at the edges is solved by forming a correspondingly wider slab and then compressing it to the finished width. This also ensures that as little trim as possible or even no trim is produced. 

In addition, Hansella recently presented its WRL Flex slitter, which is also infinitely adjustable. With this slitter, the desired bar width can be set centrally in the shortest possible time in a user-friendly manner. The knife shaft of the WRL Flex runs with the belt through the pre-cooling tunnel and reacts to any possible variations in the strip which, depending on the length of the channel, can lead to significant losses in the form of trim. “Depending on the type of bar, trim can either be reduced to an extreme minimum or completely eliminated with our flex solutions,” explains Frank Jansen, product manager at Hansella. According to Jansen, completely trimless production is possible, especially for cereal bars. In addition to flex solutions, Hansella continues to offer conventional solutions, which are ideal for applications in which, for example, strands are formed rather than a mass slab.

Open positions

Related stories & events

Stories Confectionery

Without trim to the finished bar

asically, it’s quite simple; once the recipe for a bar has been established, the task is to produce as many bars as possible from the mass produced. There are two obstacles to this: trim and varying density of the mass slap.

asically, it’s quite simple; once the recipe for a bar has been established, the task is to produce as many bars as possible from the mass produced. There are two obstacles to this: trim and varying density of the mass slap. The latter cannot be easily avoided and leads to a lower density of the mass carpet at the edges than in the center. And this in turn leads to the fact that the weight of some bars, does not correspond to the weight that is indicated on the packaging. Hansella, the Rotzinger competence center for food processing, has succeeded in solving this problem. How? With the help of the WRF Flex flexible roll former. And how exactly does this proclaimed flexibility manifest itself? The WRF Flex is the only roll former on the market on which the width of the mass slab can be precisely and continuously adjusted without interrupting the production process. The phenomenon of lower density at the edges is solved by forming a correspondingly wider slab and then compressing it to the finished width. This also ensures that as little trim as possible or even no trim is produced. 

In addition, Hansella recently presented its WRL Flex slitter, which is also infinitely adjustable. With this slitter, the desired bar width can be set centrally in the shortest possible time in a user-friendly manner. The knife shaft of the WRL Flex runs with the belt through the pre-cooling tunnel and reacts to any possible variations in the strip which, depending on the length of the channel, can lead to significant losses in the form of trim. “Depending on the type of bar, trim can either be reduced to an extreme minimum or completely eliminated with our flex solutions,” explains Frank Jansen, product manager at Hansella. According to Jansen, completely trimless production is possible, especially for cereal bars. In addition to flex solutions, Hansella continues to offer conventional solutions, which are ideal for applications in which, for example, strands are formed rather than a mass slab.

Learn more, optimize your process. Subscribe to our quarterly newsletter.

You have successfully subscribed to our newsletter.
The subscription for the newsletter failed.