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Blog posts : "pistachios"

Pistachios have always demanded precision.

From shell integrity to kernel spotting, from insect damage to foreign material, the margin between premium quality and rejected shipment can be narrow. For years, processors relied on operators, manual sorting, and standalone optical sorters to maintain standards. It worked — but it had limits.


 

How It was (and mostly still is). 

Even nowadays, most pistachio facilities operated with fixed machine thresholds. A sorter is set up at the beginning of a shift and fine-tuned based on visual checks and lab samples. If incoming product changed — moisture, staining, defect profile — adjustments are reactive.

At the same time, labor is becoming more difficult to secure. for Brad Grubb, our Qcify representant in Australia, it's important to secure facilities in case of labor shortage too:

“Shortage of labor… automation and innovation is driven by that, being able to reduce labor cost while producing more product.”
For pistachio processors, especially those exporting internationally, the pressure was even higher. Quality was not just about appearance — it was contractual.

“Driven by customers, they want to know exactly what they get. High specs, and they want them to be adhered to. Slipping means whole containers will be shipped back.” Said 
Andrés Aspillaga, commercial partner for Chile and South America

A rejected container is not just a quality issue — it is a financial disaster. 

So processors improved sorting equipment. They added more advanced optical systems. They refined defect classification. But fundamentally, the line still operated in segments — one machine at a time.

 

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In the fast-moving tree nut and peanut industry, processors need more than traditional sorting solutions. You need speed, accuracy, and automation. Whether you’re handling almonds, walnuts, pistachios, or other types of nuts, one thing is clear: The future of quality control is data-driven automa...

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