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Your ultimate guide to warehouse labels and warehouse safety netting
The warehouse labels and safety netting experts
If you need help with warehouse labels, signage, safety netting or load notices, or you are just looking for some warehouse safety advice, we are the warehouse safety experts.
We’ve been helping businesses improve their warehouse efficiency and safety for the last 25+ years by providing tried, tested and innovative barcode and safety solutions.
Whilst our warehouse safety solutions are industry-leading, we’ve become well-known for our outstanding support and guidance available to our clients. You can access all of our guidance within our FREE knowledge hub.
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Product spotlight
Warehouse labels - an industry leading solution
Our industry-leading warehouse labels have been purposely designed to improve your warehouse operations.
These labels are much more robust than standard warehouse labels meaning they can be installed quicker, incurring less downtime and in tougher environments including ambient and chilled warehouses.
FAQs
Below are just a few of out most frequently asked questions but you can find a lot more useful information and videos within our knowledge hub.
Amazingly this question doesn’t come up any more. 25 years ago when location labels were either black on white or black on yellow and printed through non colour digital printers such as thermal printers we did get asked this question quite a lot but as the vast majority of location labels are now printed in colour they have become main stream.
The answer is to the question is the price difference between colour and mono location labels is about 3%.
- Unlaminated self adhesive is 430 mm x 310 mm
- Laminated self adhesive 410 mm x 300 mm
- Laminated Magnetic 410 mm x 300 mm
- Teslin Encapsulated standard or ultra hight strength adhesive 400 mm x 280 mm
- Card insert labels 430 mm x 300 mm
- Thermal transfer (black on white labels) 900 mm long by 150 mm wide.
As a laser printing company we are limited to laser printer capacity which in our case is SRA3 size at 450 mm x 320 mm. By the time we have trimmed the edges to make a finished label we are able to produce the sizes above.
We do have a thermal transfer printer that we use predominantly for long range reflective labelling but this prints up to about 900 mm and has a maximum print width of about 150 mm.
This depends on what we are installing the labels onto, where they are and how far apart they are.
On pallet racking 2 main things play a part in installation times. If we can get a scissor lift into the aisle that enables us to install both sides of the aisle at the same time. This can literally halve the time a racking label installation can take. So in a narrow aisle situation where the beams are typically 2m apart, 2 or 3 labels per beam and several beams in a bay we can install about 2000 labels per day for a team of 2.
When the aisle is wide at say 3m this drops to between 1000 and 1200.
Other items that slow installation down are labelling over existing labels or of the racking is already loaded with pallets. These 2 items usually enable some element of damaged label mitigation and restrict the use of measuring sticks and if a pallet is already on the beam this limits installing the label very quickly as it gets in the way and adds a splinter risk to the installer who subconsciously slows down so as not to get hurt.
On long span shelving accessed from ground level the installation rate on new beams increases to approx. 2500-3300 labels per day depending on the spacing between the beam and the labels on those beams. Obviously the further apart everything is the longer it takes to cover that time. This might not seem a significant consideration but saving 1 second 10’s of thousands of times really does add up.
In small parts shelving where labels and shelves are very close together installation rates are at there quickest. Up to 4000 labels per day for an experienced team of 2.
Labels installed onto a concrete floor might take some time as we usually have to lay lines of floor tape and measure out an area before we install them. Also with floor labels we may need to clean the concrete first. Somewhere between 100 and 400 per day. Without understanding what is required estimating floor labels is quite tricky.
Aisle markers. A single person working from a lift using TEK screws and a power drill can install up to100 aisle markers per day.
Yes, we are more than happy to help make sure you have the correct labels in your operation. We normally like to do this at quote stage so we have a QMS process to follow. This makes life easier for both you and us later on if you come to place the order with us.
Information we need to know is as follows:-
What is the location reference sequence and are they numbers of letters? i.e. aisle bay level / A-01-A
Do you need an arrow to demark if the location is above or below the label?
Do you need a check digit and if so how many numbers and/or letters is it? e.g. 99 or AA or A1A1A1
Do you need a barcode? If so what does it need to read, The location only, location and check digit or just the check digit? Does it have special characters in it like the dashes or any prefixes?
And finally colours? Do you want any colour separations to help with identifying levels or specific shelves?
If you are looking for a complete set of label proofs with location files to check them off against we can do that without you raising an order but we would like an email of intent.
If your motivation behind this is to either make sure you don’t incur a cost before you know exactly what you are going to receive or because you are not sure exactly how many labels you need and changing the PO is difficult once it has been raised we can support these items with you.
We commit not to charge you until we have incurred a material cost, i.e. printed, manufactured or committed to an external supplier, so us working on your proof and location files isn’t chargeable, unless doing a proof or making a location file has been quoted as a specific item due to complexity or this is the only item you need completing.
We understand that administration and procedures at your end can add time and inconvenience to you and we want eliminate or at least minimise that for you.
If you need to raise the order after the job is proofed please just send us an email asking us to proceed to the proofing stage without committing to any costs and we will make the location files and design proofs for you. We can then confirm costs and you can raise the order prior to us commencing any printing and incurring costs on your behalf.
Yes we do provide an installation service but we don’t employ our own installers. We use training subcontractors.
We manage installation quality and progress through our operations team who are employed.
We do take full responsibility for the quality of the installation through the project.
If you want to install the labels yourself we have a guide that is free and available on Youtube.
Laminated labels are not necessarily better or worse than non-laminated ones. I believe for most people it is a matter of considered choice for most customers and here is why.
I have laminated millions of labels over 30 years and never had a single comment about lamination causing an issue with location label scanning.
Scan range issues or poor scanning performance is always down to poor quality print, the x dimension of the barcode is too small or the scanner isn’t set up correctly or have an inappropriate scan engine it it.
If a supplier is telling you lamination and bright lighting can detrimentally affect location label scanning this is incorrect. It simply affects their profit margins as they have to do 3 more processes to make the label. I have never seen a warehouse with very high lighting levels and please see our youtube video on scanning laminated location labels.
So to make a considered choice lets first of all let’s examine why there may be a need to laminate.
All laser printing materials have a toner receptive surface which makes them slightly matt in appearance. In order to get the laser toner to stick to the surface of the synthetic paper it needs a slightly rough surface before it is passed through the fuser within the printer.
Subsequently, if the label is not laminated after the print process and goes to site and is installed and is subsequently wiped over with dust on the surface this dust gets engrained in the label.
In addition, with the exception of anodised labels, all printed barcodes sit of the surface of the material and not within the surface of the material so lamination protects the print surface from minor scrapes.
Now I am not going to sit here and tell you that a laminated label is going to survive an impact with a fork lift truck, it isn’t so you need to consider if the labels you are using may get slightly knocked or scarped.
Back to choice again.
With rack labelling there is no detriment to having a label laminated.
Some sectors may specifically benefitted from laminating. i.e. operations that store liquids, or have any amount of dust build up, slightly more industrial say some fabrication works near by, etc.
If you feel you need it please go ahead and specify it.
The price difference is about 20-25% and sometimes just comes down to the values of the company and where you sit on quality or investment. Personally I would laminate labels but its your choice but please make it a considered one.
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