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Medical Moulding - Drug Delivery Devices - Medical Device Manufacturers
Focus on Medical Plastics in PRW Magazine

Amid a £2m expansion plan, Medical injection moulders Sovrin Plastics says equipment and staff investment are behind its success

At Medical Injection Moulding specialist Sovrin Plastics there are big plans for a new manufacturing facility on the site. The expansion plans have been prompted by a buoyant trade in the medical devices side of Sovrin's business. The new 2'000 sq metre operation will be dedicated to medical moulding and will incorporate a Class 10'000 - or in new Internal Standards Organization speak, Class 7 - cleanroom, brand new injection moulding machines.

The building of this facility, on which Sovrin has spent £2m, is the first phase in revamping exercise that could see the company housed in a 7'000 sq metre custom-built factory near the current site in a couple of years time. James Joiner - Projects Manager, emphasizes this is the final phase is still "just a proposal", but given Sovrin's steady growth and volume of work, it seems a plan likely to come fruition.

The company has explored Six Sigma production techniques to ensure that the new site is as lean & efficient as possible. "We already follow cGMP (Good Manufacturing Practices) techniques, and have recognized the benefits that Six Sigma, particularly in the sectors we operate," Joiner says.

Good manufacturing practice, which lays down guidelines on issues such as full batch traceability, is viewed by the US Food & Drug Administration and the Medicines Control Agency in the UK as prerequisite to licensing.

Sovrin runs four production and assembly cleanroom; three are Class 10'000 (Class 7) the other Class 100'000 (Class 8).

Adjacent to one of the Class 10'000 cleanrooms is an automated assembly line, installation cost £1m. Joiner believes the firm's willingness to invest in the latest equipment is behind its success in the sector.

"We're always trying to be at the forefront of technology. But because many of the components and assemblies that we produce are so precise and technically demanding, its only the high tech machines that can achieve the tight tolerances that we are looking at"


(April 2002)
The new site is expected to be operational by December 2002.


The firm is keen to stress its willingness to invest in the in its workforce is also behind its growth. Sovrin has offered apprenticeships in toolmaking, quality engineering and process technology for "many, many years" according to Peter Wigmore, Business Development Manager at Sovrin. He says training has to be vigorous; due to stringent guidelines surrounding manufacturer for the medical device market, attention to detail must be second nature to all staff. Every Medical Device and component manufactured is manually inspected at both moulding and assembly stages.

The Class 100'000 cleanroom was installed four years ago, after the company took a decision to bring its printing facilities in-house."We used to sub-contract out our printing, but after having difficulties with logistics and other issues, we decided to bring that back" Wigmore says."We considered it necessary to site it in a cleanroom, and we have had four moulding machines in there as well at the beginning." The firm now has eight moulding machines in this area, robotic handling systems and another four-colour pad printing cell.

But Medical is not the only sector in which Sovrin operates in. It has a technical moulding division serving sectors including electrics and electronics.

Founded 1968 by managing director Peter Joiner
1,000 sq metre toolroom, with 14 full-time toolmakers. Equipment includes two sodick CNC Mouldmaker 3 spark eroders all with 3R systems and Sodick wire eroders.
Four cleanroom production/assembly areas, Three Class 10'000, one Class 100'000
Total Manufacturing area of 5000 sq metres
Total staff of 150
Forty-five Demag Injection moulding machines, ranging from 25 to 240 tonnes, run on a five day, 24 hour basis - although the company has a "flexible" approach to weekend work.

Article from Rubber & Plastics Weekly -
April 2002 - Chloe Hague


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