Broken Arrow makes more ice cream than most people realize. A single plant here produces roughly 110,000 half-gallons, 120,000 pints, and 30,000 dozen cups a day, and it's mid-expansion on an automated storage and retrieval system built to hold 8,500 pallets alongside new cold docks and dry-storage space. That volume is exactly where packaging automation earns its keep, from case erecting and sealing through palletizing. A few miles away, a stretch-film manufacturer founded in 1988 has been producing pallet-wrap film for packaging operations since before most of its customers existed. Food processing sits alongside aerospace, glass, metal fabrication and plastics among the roughly 300 manufacturing operations the city counts today, part of a base that makes Broken Arrow Oklahoma's third-largest manufacturing center, with more than 5,600 manufacturing jobs spread across 12 industrial and business parks.
For frozen-foods operations at this scale, we supply the equipment that turns high-volume output into shipped pallets: automatic case erectors and case packers for cartoning ice cream and frozen products, PackMaster cobot palletizers sized for the same throughput as an automated storage and retrieval system, and checkweighers that catch fill variance before it reaches a customer. Stretch-film production is a materials-side complement to that equipment, not a replacement for it. Pallets still need to be built, wrapped and moved off the line without a person doing it by hand. Every shift has to keep moving. The plant here doesn't slow its line for a pallet change; the equipment behind it shouldn't either. Our food and beverage packaging solutions, VFFS and case-packing lines, and broader equipment catalog are sized for exactly this scale of Oklahoma manufacturing.