In plants with strict 5S rules, mold storage has to do more than hold weight. It also has to stay clean, visible, and easy to manage.
Erack gives large molds a controlled storage position, so the floor stays clearer and the storage area is easier to keep tidy under visual management rules.
Main pain points
Traditional floor stacking and wood pallet storage can collect dust, block cleaning access, and make the molding area harder to control. That creates problems for cleanrooms and for plants that depend on visual order.
- Dust buildup on ground-stored molds
- Hard-to-clean pallet and floor storage
- Poor visual management in the work area
- Space lost to low-efficiency storage
Core value
Erack helps keep tooling off the floor and in a cleaner, more organized storage system. That supports better housekeeping, clearer identification of molds, and a stronger visual management standard across the plant.
It is a practical fit for operations that need both clean storage and high-density mold control.
Product features and parameters
Erack is an industrial tooling storage system built for heavy mold storage and clean handling environments.
| Item | Specification |
|---|---|
| Product type | Heavy duty mold rack |
| Use case | Clean storage and mold control |
| Handling | Overhead crane or hoist depending on layout |
| Goal | Cleaner storage and better space use |
| Storage style | Drawer-style heavy mold storage |
Suitable scenarios
This setup fits multinational packaging and molding plants that need stricter cleanliness and better visual order in the tooling area.
- Cleanroom-adjacent storage areas
- Visual management upgrades
- High-density tooling control
- 5S improvement projects
Delivery method
Erack is supplied as a standard rack system that can be installed on site. Share the mold size and the heaviest load, and a layout and quote can be prepared around that load.
Recommended products
Tell us your mold size, expected quantity, and required delivery date. We will review the layout and send back a practical response.

