Senad DWS Automatic Small Item Sorting System
In stock
- MERKI:
- SENAD
- HLUTI #:
- DWS Automatic Small Item Sorting System
- ORIGIN:
- Kína
- AVAILABILITY:
- SUBJECT TO AVAILABILITY
- SKU:
- Senad-DWS-Automatic-Small-Item-Sorting-System
In modern fulfillment operations, DWS sorting systems are used to capture accurate parcel dimensions and weight, identify items via barcodes, and route each item to the correct destination lane or chute—supporting faster throughput, improved billing accuracy, and more reliable inventory and shipping records.
Within this category, Senad markets DWS equipment that integrates precision weighing and barcode scanning with automated handling and sorting functions, including systems intended for e-commerce and logistics workflows. For example, Senad describes DWS solutions that measure an item’s length, width, height, and weight while scanning barcodes and processing data for operational use.
Design and Features
Integrated DWS Measurement Pipeline
A typical DWS small-item sorter is organized as a measurement pipeline:
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Infeed and singulation: Items are spaced and aligned so each parcel can be measured individually.
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Dimensioning: A sensor suite (often 3D vision/structured light or laser profiling) calculates parcel dimensions.
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Weighing: An in-motion or static scale captures the parcel’s mass.
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Scanning and identification: Barcode scanners read 1D/2D labels (and sometimes OCR or image capture is used for exception handling).
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Decision and divert: A controller uses rules from WMS/OMS/TMS or shipping software to determine the correct route.
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Sorting: Items are diverted into sorting ports, chutes, bags, racks, or conveyors.
Senad’s product positioning includes DWS equipment described as a precision weighing and scanning machine and an e-commerce DWS system with sorting ports, aligning with this pipeline concept.
Modular Mechanical Layouts
Small-item DWS sorters commonly use modular layouts depending on throughput and site constraints:
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Belt or roller conveyor infeed
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Integrated measurement gantry (dimensioning + scanning)
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Weighing section (often embedded in conveyor)
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Multi-lane sorter (divert arms, pop-up wheels, narrow-belt sorters, or chute-based diverters)
In practice, many systems are scalable by adding more divert points (ports) or parallel processing lines.
Sorting Ports and Put-Wall Integration
Small item sorting often ends in:
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Sorting ports/chutes that collect items by carrier, route, store, or wave
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Put-to-wall / put-wall stations (manual placement with system guidance) when mixed-SKU order consolidation is needed
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Bagging or containerization for last-mile staging
Senad’s e-commerce DWS positioning explicitly references a configuration “with sorting ports,” which matches these common warehouse designs.
Technology and Specifications
Dimensioning (Volumetric Measurement)
Dimensioning is typically performed using:
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3D cameras (stereo vision, structured light, time-of-flight)
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Laser line profilers or multi-point laser arrays
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Image processing + calibration to convert pixel measurements into real-world dimensions
Accuracy depends on calibration, parcel surface characteristics, conveyor stability, and whether items are single, separated, and aligned.
Why dimensioning matters: Many parcel carriers apply dimensional (volumetric) weight rules where billing is based on the greater of actual weight and dimensional weight. FedEx, for instance, describes dimensional weight as reflecting the space a package occupies and provides an example formula: multiply L × W × H and divide by a divisor (e.g., 139 in³/lb or 5,000 cm³/kg), rounding dimensions upward to whole units.
Weighing (Static or In-Motion)
Weighing can be implemented as:
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Static weighing (item stops briefly on a scale for maximum precision)
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Dynamic/in-motion weighing (item continues moving; throughput is higher, precision depends on system tuning)
Typical selection criteria include legal-for-trade requirements (where applicable), throughput targets, and the acceptable tolerance for billing and process control.
Barcode Scanning and Data Capture
Barcode scanning subsystems may include:
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Omnidirectional 1D/2D scanners
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Top/side scanning tunnels for labels placed inconsistently
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Image capture for audit trails and exception resolution
In e-commerce and parcel workflows, scanning reliability is strongly influenced by label placement, print quality, and parcel geometry.
Controls, Software, and Integration
Most DWS sorting systems integrate with:
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WMS (Warehouse Management System) for inventory and task control
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OMS (Order Management System) for order rules and consolidation
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TMS/Carrier systems for label printing, routing, and manifesting
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APIs / middleware for data exchange and reporting
The system output typically includes a record per parcel: barcode ID, dimensions, actual weight, timestamp, photos (optional), and sort destination.
Applications and Use Cases
E-commerce Fulfillment and Returns
DWS small item sorters support:
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Fast induction and routing during outbound fulfillment
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Automated zone sorting for wave picking or pack stations
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Returns processing: scan + weigh + dimension to validate return eligibility and restocking rules
Courier, Express, and Parcel (CEP) Operations
Parcel hubs use DWS to:
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Capture billing data (weight + dimensions)
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Detect anomalies (oversize, underweight/overweight, missing label)
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Feed sorters that route items to routes, depots, or linehauls
3PL and Contract Logistics
Third-party logistics providers benefit from DWS sorting by:
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Generating auditable billing records for clients
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Improving SLAs with consistent measurement and routing
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Reducing manual handling and mis-sorts
Manufacturing and Distribution Centers
In industrial distribution, DWS measurement supports cartonization verification, shipping compliance, and automated staging.
Advantages / Benefits
Billing Accuracy and Cost Control
By capturing accurate dimensions and weight, a DWS system helps avoid disputes and surprises tied to volumetric pricing. Carriers may charge based on dimensional weight when it exceeds actual weight, making measurement discipline economically important.
Higher Throughput with Fewer Touchpoints
Automation reduces repeated manual steps (manual weighing, manual measuring, repeated scanning), increasing throughput while lowering labor intensity.
Reduced Mis-sorts and Better Traceability
Automated routing based on verified IDs and rules reduces mis-sorts. When paired with image capture and event logs, DWS systems provide stronger traceability for claims and exception handling.
Better Space Utilization and Packaging Optimization
Consistent dimension data can be used to:
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Improve carton selection (right-sizing)
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Optimize trailer/container loading
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Identify chronic packaging waste patterns
FAQ Section
What is a Senad DWS Automatic Small Item Sorting System?
A Senad DWS Automatic Small Item Sorting System is a warehouse and logistics automation solution that combines dimensioning, weighing, and barcode scanning with automated routing so small parcels can be identified, measured, and sorted into destination ports or lanes.
How does a DWS small item sorting system work?
The system typically moves items along a conveyor where sensors measure L×W×H, a scale captures weight, scanners read barcode IDs, and software assigns a destination. The parcel is then diverted into the correct chute, lane, or sorting port.
Why is DWS dimensioning and weighing important?
Because many carriers use dimensional weight rules where the billable weight is the greater of actual weight and volumetric weight. FedEx explains that dimensional weight reflects the space a package occupies and provides a common calculation method using L × W × H divided by a divisor (e.g., 139 in³/lb or 5,000 cm³/kg), with rounding rules.
What are the benefits of an automatic small item sorting system?
Common benefits include faster throughput, fewer manual touchpoints, improved billing accuracy (weight + dimensions), reduced mis-sorts, and better traceability through scan and measurement records.
Summary
A Senad DWS Automatic Small Item Sorting System represents a modern approach to parcel handling that unifies dimensioning, weighing, barcode identification, and automated sorting into a single operational flow. By producing consistent measurement and ID data—and using that data to route items automatically—DWS sorting systems support higher warehouse throughput, improved shipping charge accuracy, and stronger end-to-end traceability in e-commerce, 3PL, and parcel logistics environments.
Specifications
| HLUTI # | DWS Automatic Small Item Sorting System |
|---|---|
| MERKI | SENAD |