Senad Parcel Sorting Machine Warehouse Barcode Weight Dimension

The Senad Parcel Sorting Machine Warehouse Barcode Weight Dimension is an automated logistics solution designed to capture parcel identification and billing data—typically barcode, weight, and dimensions (L×W×H)—and then sort parcels to defined destinations on a conveyor-based line.

In stock

BRAND:
SENAD
PART #:
Parcel Sorting Machine Warehouse Barcode Weight Dimension
ORIGIN:
China
AVAILABILITY:
SUBJECT TO AVAILABILITY
SKU:
Senad-Parcel-Sorting-Machine-Warehouse-Barcode-Weight-Dimension

Systems in this category are often described as DWS (Dimensioning, Weighing, Scanning) equipment integrated with sorting conveyors and controls, enabling warehouses, courier hubs, and e-commerce fulfillment operations to standardize parcel intake, reduce manual handling, and improve throughput.

In practical deployments, a parcel is introduced onto an infeed conveyor; the system reads the barcode, measures the parcel’s physical dimensions, and records weight—often while the parcel is moving—before routing the parcel onward based on rules tied to barcode data, service level, destination, or weight band. Senad’s product literature describes DWS solutions that collect these key parcel attributes and support integration with external management systems via standard interfaces.


Design and Features

Conveyor-based modular line architecture

Senad’s parcel sorting and DWS product family is commonly presented as modular conveyor sections (infeed/speed-up, scanning & measurement section, exception handling, and outbound diverters). A typical configuration includes a belt conveyor with a dedicated measurement/scan zone and one or more divert points for sorting to destinations.

Barcode, weight, and dimension capture (DWS core)

At the center of the system is the DWS capability:

  • Barcode scanning (often via industrial cameras) to identify parcels and link them to shipment records.

  • Dynamic or static weighing, depending on whether parcels are weighed while moving or at a fixed station.

  • 3D/vision-based dimensioning using one or more depth/3D cameras to compute parcel length, width, height and (where required) volumetric weight.

Multi-camera scanning for higher read rates

For challenging labels and orientations, systems may use multi-side barcode imaging. Senad describes a six-side barcode scanning DWS approach with multiple cameras positioned around the parcel to improve barcode recognition performance.

Data export and system integration

DWS systems are typically used to push measurement and ID data to WMS/TMS/ERP (warehouse, transport, or enterprise systems). In Senad specifications, software interfaces can include common industrial/network protocols (e.g., HTTP/TCP and other interfaces listed in product specs), enabling downstream automation such as routing, billing, and exception handling workflows.


Technology and Specifications

Measurement principles

Most modern parcel DWS systems use computer vision and structured sensing (often described as 3D cameras or volume measuring instruments) combined with load cells for weighing and industrial imaging for barcode acquisition. Senad describes solutions that can measure dimensions and weight within seconds and capture barcode information for sorting and tracking.

Example performance and capability ranges

Specifications vary by model and payload class, but Senad’s published product examples provide indicative ranges:

  • High-quality weighing & scanning DWS sorting system (package dimension scanner)

    • Weighing range: 0.04–30 kg; weighing accuracy: ±10 g

    • Dimension range: 100×100×50 mm to 500×500×500 mm; dimension accuracy: ±10/±15 mm

    • Scanning efficiency: ~1200–1800 pieces (listed as throughput/efficiency)

    • Recognition rate: 99.9% (normal packages)

    • Hardware examples include an Intel i5 industrial PC, industrial barcode camera, and dual 3D cameras.

  • DWS warehouse logistics system (dimension weighing)

    • Weighing range: 30 g–60 kg; weighing accuracy: ±20 g

    • Dimensioning range: 50×50×50 mm to 800×800×800 mm; dimensioning accuracy: ±5–15 mm

    • Capacity: ~2500–3600 pcs/hour (stated)

    • Recognition/scanning accuracy figures are listed around ~99% for normal packages.

These published figures illustrate how a “parcel sorting machine warehouse barcode weight dimension” system can be scaled from small-parcel lines to larger parcels and higher throughput by changing sensor geometry, conveyor design, and load cell capacity.


Applications and Use Cases

Courier and express parcel hubs

In courier operations, DWS and sorting equipment support inbound registration, label verification, and automated routing to chutes or lanes. Senad’s logistics-oriented descriptions emphasize express, warehousing registration, and e-commerce distribution scenarios.

E-commerce fulfillment and 3PL warehouses

E-commerce and third-party logistics (3PL) providers use barcode-weight-dimension capture to:

  • confirm cartonization and packing compliance,

  • calculate dimensional weight for carrier billing, and

  • feed routing logic for sortation by carrier, zone, or service level.

Returns processing and audit lanes

A dedicated DWS lane can help returns centers record as-received dimensions/weight and verify label identity, improving reconciliation and reducing disputes in high-volume reverse logistics flows. (This is a common DWS workflow pattern; system capabilities align with Senad’s described measurement and scanning functions.)

Warehouse automation and storage assignment

Where facilities use automated storage or zone-based putaway, DWS output can help determine storage location suitability (e.g., oversized items) and trigger exception handling before items enter automated conveyors.


Advantages / Benefits

Faster processing with consistent data quality

By automating measurement and barcode capture, the system reduces manual steps and creates a consistent data record for each parcel. Senad positions its DWS products around rapid measurement and efficient data capture for operational efficiency.

Reduced shipping errors and chargebacks

Dimension/weight accuracy supports correct carrier billing and helps reduce re-weigh/re-measure events. Senad’s dimension-weight scanning messaging highlights reducing shipping errors and unnecessary expenses by improving measurement reliability.

Higher barcode read rates in real-world conditions

Multi-camera layouts (including multi-side barcode scanning) address labels that are wrinkled, partially occluded, or placed on different faces of the parcel—improving automation stability in mixed parcel streams.

Integration-ready for WMS/TMS workflows

DWS systems are typically most valuable when integrated with business systems; Senad’s published specs explicitly list software interface options, aligning with a standard pattern of pushing scan/measure results into operational software.


FAQ Section

What is the Senad Parcel Sorting Machine Warehouse Barcode Weight Dimension?

It is an automated parcel handling system that combines barcode scanning, weighing, and dimensioning (DWS) with conveyor routing so parcels can be measured, identified, and sorted to destinations based on rules like barcode data or weight bands.

How does the Senad DWS-based parcel sorting system work?

Parcels enter on a conveyor, pass through a zone where cameras read barcodes and 3D sensors measure dimensions while load cells record weight, and then the control software outputs the captured data and triggers sorting/divert logic to route parcels to the correct lane or destination.

Why is barcode, weight, and dimension capture important in warehouses?

These data points support accurate identification, carrier billing (including dimensional weight), and routing decisions inside WMS/TMS workflows. Capturing them consistently reduces shipping errors and helps streamline logistics operations.

What are the benefits of a Senad automatic logistics sorting system?

Common benefits include higher throughput, reduced manual labor, improved measurement consistency for billing and auditing, higher barcode read performance (especially with multi-camera options), and easier integration of scan/measure data into warehouse software workflows.

What parcel sizes and weights can these systems handle?

Senad’s published examples include small-parcel DWS ranges (e.g., up to 30 kg with defined dimension ranges) and larger warehouse logistics configurations that extend measurement and weighing ranges (e.g., up to 60 kg and larger dimension envelopes), depending on the selected model.


Summary

The Senad Parcel Sorting Machine Warehouse Barcode Weight Dimension represents a modern, automation-oriented approach to parcel handling that combines DWS measurement (dimensions + weight) with barcode identification and conveyor sorting. By standardizing the capture of shipment-critical data and linking it to routing logic and warehouse software, the system supports higher throughput, better billing accuracy, and more reliable operational control across e-commerce fulfillment, courier hubs, and logistics warehouses.

Specifications

PART # Parcel Sorting Machine Warehouse Barcode Weight Dimension
BRAND SENAD

What's included

Senad Parcel Sorting Machine Warehouse Barcode Weight Dimension (Parcel Sorting Machine Warehouse Barcode Weight Dimension)

Product Questions

Your Question:
Write a Review
You're reviewing: Senad Parcel Sorting Machine Warehouse Barcode Weight Dimension
loader
Loading...

You submitted your review for moderation.

Customer Support